At least in InspIRCd's implementation, you only get invite-notify
INVITEs if you are op, so inviting with no op (where allowed by a
channel mode) results in only a 341. On the other hand, inviting
as an op produces both a 341 and an INVITE, so will be displayed
twice, but showing something sometimes twice is better than not
showing it at all.
In other words, only automatically switch to an automatically joined
channel window if there's only one. Otherwise, stay on the <network>
window and avoid touching the channel windows with their automatic
topic and names replies.
This fixes unintentionally clearing saved window unread counts when
rejoining channels automatically by switching to them as they are
joined.
While the automatic search via LESS is neat, I don't think it's very
useful. Just always open the manual to the COMMANDS section, and fix it
to append to LESS rather than replace it.
It's pretty awkward with large channels since NAMES isn't sorted by
prefixes or anything... But having it accumulate names across many
replies would require more reworking.
This fixes a bug where if you send a private message before joining any
channels, your message will be routed to the <network> window. That
happens because without a JOIN, self.user remains unset, which means
that require will copy self.nick (set by echoMessage) to self.host. The
easiest solution is to go back to checking for '.' and add a '.' to the
default nick, so now if a server sends a NOTICE with no origin it will
look like -*.*- which is kinda cute.
The mention coloring code already matches case-sensitively, and any
proper ping should be using tab-complete anyway so there's no reason for
differing case. And the month of June should not ping me.
Also determine if a message is from the server by if the host field has
been copied from the nick field.
EFNet sends NOTICEs with no origin during registration.
RFC 1459 has this to say:
> If the prefix is missing from the message, it is assumed to have
> originated from the connection from which it was received.
I suppose a more correct implementation would be to set the origin to
the hostname of the server, but we don't store that globally, so this
is good enough.
Apparently IRCds have decided that the 15-parameter limit doesn't matter
anymore. 254 is the maximum number of single-byte parameters (following
a single-byte command) which fit in a 512-byte CR-LF-terminated line.
When everyone decides that the 512-byte line length limit doesn't matter
either, I will delete my software and people can use some JavaScript
garbage instead.
This makes struct Message 2080 bytes, but there's only ever one or two
of them around at once. Avoid passing it by value to handle.