Mirc Script Remote User Setup
By: Venidikt • Essay • 801 Words • January 25, 2010 • 894 Views
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The users section of mIRC controls how your version of mIRC will react to ceratain users. To auto op someone for example. We already know that 'on 1:text:toys:#:/msg $nick I looove to play with toys!' will respond to everyone with "I looove to play with toys!" but let's make it so it only messages your good friends and tells them you looove to play with toys. Modify that line to look like this:
on 50:text:toys:#:/msg $nick I looove to play with toys!
See the difference? Of course you do! Instead of a 1, there's a 50! Now, mIRC will only respond to people who have the level 50, and not to people below the level 50. Let's say you've forgiven chucky for all the rotten things he did before, and now he's a friend, and you make him a level 50 user (we'll get to this a little later). mIRC reacts to a persons level and everything BELOW that level. For example, mIRC would respond to chucky on all level 50 commands and any level 30 commands or level 10 commands or level 1 commands. But, poor 'ole chucky could not activate any 80 or 100 commands...or anything above his level (which is 50).
Now...how do we make chucky a level 50 user? First, we can use a /auser command. Using the /auser command will set a certain nick as the level which you want. The basic command for using this is:
/auser
So, type /auser 50 chucky, and chucky will now be a level 50 user (I'm sure he'll be excited).
The other way to add chucky at a certain level is the /guser command. This works the same as the /auser command except that it looks up address of the specified nick and adds it to the user list. It does this by doing a /userhost on the given nickname, and returning an address in the format specified by type. If no type is specified then a default address format is selected. So if one day chucky wanted to be chuckanne, if you had added him using /auser, he would not receive any messages for his user level, he would simply be a level 1 user. But, if you added him with the /guser command, he (or she) could use any nickname he pleased. The basic command for adding someone by using /guser is:
/guser
Okay, the only thing that is different from /asure is the . Well mIRC has 4 different ways of adding an address. You choose the method by adding a 1,2,3, or 4 at the end. To explain this lets say you do a whois on chucky and it looks like this:
Chucky is wiley@rt1.yin.interaccess.com * *Unknown, Unless you Know*
This how mIRC would add chucky's address at each of the 4 types:
Type 1--> *!*wiley@rt1.yin.interaccess.com
Type 2--> *!*@rt1.yin.interaccess.com