"/ /asdf" now works the same as "//asdf". This is just a convenience for
those of us used to irssi habits, which tend to die hard. :)
QString msg = msg_;
// leading slashes indicate there's a command to call unless there is another one in the first section (like a path /proc/cpuinfo)
QString msg = msg_;
// leading slashes indicate there's a command to call unless there is another one in the first section (like a path /proc/cpuinfo)
+ // For those habitally tied to irssi, "/ " also makes the rest of the line a literal message
int secondSlashPos = msg.indexOf('/', 1);
int firstSpacePos = msg.indexOf(' ');
int secondSlashPos = msg.indexOf('/', 1);
int firstSpacePos = msg.indexOf(' ');
- if (!msg.startsWith('/') || (secondSlashPos != -1 && (secondSlashPos < firstSpacePos || firstSpacePos == -1))) {
+ if (!msg.startsWith('/') || firstSpacePos == 1 || (secondSlashPos != -1 && (secondSlashPos < firstSpacePos || firstSpacePos == -1))) {
if (msg.startsWith("//"))
if (msg.startsWith("//"))
- msg.remove(0, 1); // //asdf is transformed to /asdf
+ msg.remove(0, 1); // "//asdf" is transformed to "/asdf"
+ else if (msg.startsWith("/ "))
+ msg.remove(0, 2); // "/ /asdf" is transformed to "/asdf"
msg.prepend("/SAY "); // make sure we only send proper commands to the core
}
else {
msg.prepend("/SAY "); // make sure we only send proper commands to the core
}
else {