I am willing to trade my knowledge of the more obscure corners of Mudlet and ask in exchange that you spend some of your time putting this dark knowledge to use for my purposes. I find that I have more good ideas for things than I have time to create them. I am a curmudgeonly hermit atop a lonely mountain in search of an apprentice. Thanks for sticking with me through a longer than usual feature highlight, and thanks go out once again to Tamarindo for writing the sound section for me. string.patternEscape will escape your string for use with Lua patternsĪs usual this is by no means an exhaustive list, but a selection of the things I want to highlight for one reason or another, but Mudlet is constantly evolving and changing and even I have a hard time keeping all the changes in mind.windowType will tell you if it’s a MiniConsole, the main window, etc.getProfileStats returns a table listing the active, temp, and total number of triggers, aliases, etc for use in profiling your packages and optimizing things.bold, overline, underline, italics, and strikethrough support in ansi2decho and c/d/hecho2ansi functions.PretestPackage: $)īackground: QLinearGradient( x1: 0, y1: 0, x2: 0, y2: 1, stop: 0 #98f041, stop: 0.1 #8cf029, stop: 0.49 #66cc00, stop: 0.5 #52a300, stop: 1 #66cc00) ĭecho("tl", "This is a tester and so far it seems to pass") decho being used on a test label Other improvements Here’s the workflow I use for the MDK now. You can view the action on the marketplace. And now I have the MDK building and testing automatically when I make a pull request. So I set out to make a GitHub action which would mimic the steps already in use in Mudlet’s build tasks to run our Busted tests for Mudlet itself. In the process, I realized I really ought to make it so GitHub could do the automated running for me, even if I had made it so I could test easily when booted into Windows and even get nice color output. As part of eliminating my remaining excuses for not properly testing all my Mudlet packages, I repackaged Busted for use in Mudlet on Windows.
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