MIRC Scripting/BeyondBasics/Hash Tables
Hash Tables
Hash tables allow you to efficiently store large amounts of information which can be quickly referenced and retrieved later on.
A hash table can be created, freed, referenced, or modified using the following commands and identifiers.
/hmake -s <name> <N> Creates a new hash table with N slots.
A hash table can store an unlimited number of items regardless of the N you choose, however the bigger N is, the faster it will work, depending on the number of items stored.
eg. if you expect that you'll be storing 1000 items in the table, a table of N set to 100 is quite sufficient.
The -s switch makes the command display the result.
/hfree -sw <name>
Frees an existing hash table.
The -w switch indicates that name is a wildcard, all matching tables are freed.
/hadd -smbczuN <name> <item> [data | &binvar] Adds an item to an existing hash table.
If the item you're adding already exists, the old item is replaced.
The -m switch makes /hadd create the hash table if it doesn't already exist.
The -uN switch unsets the item after N seconds.
The -b indicates that you're adding a &binvar item to the hash table.
The -c switch chops the &binvar up to the first null value and treats it as plain text.
The -z switch decreases hash item once per second until it reaches zero and then unsets it.
The /hinc and /hdec commands use the same parameters as /hadd and increase or decrease the number value of an item.
When used with /hinc or /hdec, the -c switch increases or decreases the value once per second.
/hdel -sw <name> <item> Deletes an item from a hash table.
The -w switch indicates that item is a wildcard, all matching items are freed.
/hload -sbni <name> <filename> [section] /hsave -sbnioau <name> <filename> [section] Load or save a table to/from a file.
These load/save plain text to a text file, with item and data on separate lines. $cr and $lf characters are stripped from text when saving as plain text.
The -b switch loads or saves binary files. $cr and $lf are preserved when saving as binary files.
You can use -n to load or save files as data only, with no items. When loading with -n each line of data is assigned an N item value, starting at N = 1.
/hsave also supports -o to overwite an existing file, and -a to append to an existing file.
By default /hsave excludes items that are in the /hadd -uN unset list, the -u switch forces it to include the unset items.
The -i switch treats the file as an ini file. You can specify an optional section name after the filename.
Note: /hload does not create the table, it must already have been created by /hmake.
$hget(name/N) Returns name of a hash table if it exists, or returns the name of the Nth hash table.
Properties: size
$hget(moo).size returns the N size of table, as specified in /hmake
$hget(name/N, item)
Returns the data associated with an item in the specified hash table.
Properties: unset
The unset property returns the time remaining before an item is unset.
$hget(name/N, item, &binvar) Assigns the contents of an item to a &binvar.
$hget(name/N, N).item This allows you to reference the table as an index from 0 to N, in order to look up the Nth item in the table.
If N is zero, returns the total number of items in the table.
You can also reference the Nth data value directly with $hget().data.
Note: This method is provided as a convenience, it is not an efficient way to use the hash table.
$hfind(name/N, text, N, M) Searches table for the Nth item name which matches text. Returns item name.
Properties: data
If you specify the .data property, searches for a matching data value.
M is optional, and can be:
n normal text comparison (default if M isn't specified) w text is wildcard text W hash table item/data is wildcard text r text is regular expression R hash table item/data is regular expression