I'm using the World of warcraft API. And I want to find an EventMessageFilter. I can do so by calling
ChatFrame_GetMessageEventFilters("event")
And to do this I have to pass a chat event, in my case CHAT_MSG_WHISPER_INFORM.
So according to the API located over at
http://wowprogramming.com/docs/api/ChatFrame_GetMessageEventFilters
This function will return a table. So I named the table and tried to print its content with this code
local myNewTable = filterTable = ChatFrame_GetMessageEventFilters("CHAT_MSG_WHISPER_INFORM")
for i in pairs(myNewTable) do
print(asd[i])
end
And this then prints out something like
function: 00000312498vn27842934c4
I have checked with
type(asd[i])
and it really is a function. But how can I get the content of it? How do I handle it?
I want to find an EventMessageFilter
Can you elaborate? Whose filter are you looking for and what do you intend to do with it?
it really is a function.
That's what this API does: returns a list of functions that are registered as filters for a particular message type (via ChatFrame_AddMessageEventFilter).
But how can I get the content of it?
You can't. The WoW API doesn't offer you any facilities for decompiling functions.
If your intention is to filter chat messages yourself, you don't need to call this function at all. Just call ChatFrame_AddMessageEventFilter to add your filter.
So I managed to solve my problem by removing to current filters that have been put in place by another addon and then just add my own filter. As Mud pointed out. GMEF was supposed to return functions. I now see how this makes sense. But now I have made the code to remove the functions. If you want to re-add them later on, just store them in a variable until you are done but I won't include this in my answer. I also feel like my answer is kinda half off-topic ish. But to answer my own question. It is supposed to return functions and you can't see the contents of these functions. This is the code I used to remove the functions that were put in there by another addon.
function rekkFilters()
local myFilters = ChatFrame_GetMessageEventFilters("CHAT_MSG_WHISPER_INFORM")
for i in pairs(myFilters) do
ChatFrame_RemoveMessageEventFilter("CHAT_MSG_WHISPER_INFORM", myFilters[i])
end
end
local myFilters = ChatFrame_GetMessageEventFilters("CHAT_MSG_WHISPER_INFORM")
rekkFilters()
local myFilters = ChatFrame_GetMessageEventFilters("CHAT_MSG_WHISPER_INFORM")
if myFilters[1] ~= nil then
rekkFilters()
end
Related
I have 2 nodes, which needs to call one function - it's common place in programming.
I suppose, there is no way in node-red to call the function, except "wiring" Function nodes sequentially.
Well, I did try it, but with no success.
Please look(copy_paste) at my flow and give help:
[{"id":"d86b4b3b.0670d8","type":"inject","z":"901492e5.e9666","name":"","topic":"","payload":"","payloadType":"date","repeat":"","crontab":"","once":false,"x":169,"y":224,"wires":[["1a6b10c8.0788cf"]]},{"id":"1a6b10c8.0788cf","type":"function","z":"901492e5.e9666","name":"func0","func":"if(msg.payload.second_call){return [null,msg];}\nelse {msg.payload[\"second_call\"] = true;\nmsg.payload[\"count\"] = 0;\nreturn [msg,null];\n}\n","outputs":"2","noerr":0,"x":350,"y":223,"wires":[["577ae7e1.0c1948"],["b2204e3f.44cef"]]},{"id":"577ae7e1.0c1948","type":"function","z":"901492e5.e9666","name":"func1","func":"msg.payload.count++;\nreturn msg;","outputs":1,"noerr":0,"x":352,"y":316,"wires":[["1a6b10c8.0788cf"]]},{"id":"4e8f3348.10ab0c","type":"debug","z":"901492e5.e9666","name":"","active":true,"console":"false","complete":"payload","x":783.5,"y":332,"wires":[]},{"id":"b2204e3f.44cef","type":"function","z":"901492e5.e9666","name":"func3","func":"msg.payload.count++;\nreturn msg;","outputs":1,"noerr":0,"x":619,"y":332,"wires":[["4e8f3348.10ab0c"]]},{"id":"5bf50c74.5376e4","type":"inject","z":"901492e5.e9666","name":"","topic":"","payload":"","payloadType":"date","repeat":"","crontab":"","once":false,"x":160,"y":422,"wires":[["c9b5e6b.ae91818"]]},{"id":"c9b5e6b.ae91818","type":"function","z":"901492e5.e9666","name":"func10","func":"if(msg.payload.second_call){return [null,msg];}\nelse {msg.payload[\"second_call\"] = true;\nmsg.payload[\"count\"] = 0;\nreturn [msg,null];\n}\n","outputs":"2","noerr":0,"x":345,"y":422,"wires":[["f11eb781.083348"],["b2204e3f.44cef"]]},{"id":"f11eb781.083348","type":"function","z":"901492e5.e9666","name":"func11","func":"msg.payload.count+=10;\nreturn msg;","outputs":1,"noerr":0,"x":348,"y":508,"wires":[["c9b5e6b.ae91818"]]}]
There are a few of options here.
If you are going to use the "function" multiple time then you could wrap it up in a sub-flow. This means that there is one copy of the code to edit and you can chain this into flows that do not have a common end.
If you are not going to have to change the "function" at all once it's written you can add it to the functionGlobalContext in the settings.js. This will let you include it in a given function node. See the doc for how to use the context. This does mean that you can't change the code without restarting Node-RED
I've a function which is called from different components, .cfms or remotely. It returns the results of a query.
Sometimes the response from this function is manually inspected - a person may want to see the ID of a specific record so they can use it elsewhere.
The provided return formats, being wddx, json, plain all aren't very easily readable for a layman.
I'd love to be able to create a new return format: dump, where the result first writeDumped and then returned to the caller.
I know there'd be more complicated ways of solving this, like writing a function dump, and calling that like a proxy by providing the component, function and parameters so it can call that function and return the results.
However I don't think it's worth going that far. I figured it'd be great if I could just write a new return format, because that's just... intuitive and nice, and I may also be able to use that technique to solve different problems or improve various workflows.
Is there a way to create custom function returnFormats in ColdFusion 10 or 11?
(From comments)
AFAIK, you cannot add a custom returntype to a cffunction, but take a look at OnCFCRequest. Might be able to use it to build something more generic that responds differently whenever a custom URL parameter is passed, ie url.returnformat=yourType. Same net effect as dumping and/or manipulating the result manually, just a little more automated.
From the comments, the return type of the function is query. That being the case, there is simply no need for a custom return format. If you want to dump the query results, do so.
queryVar = objectName.nameOfFunction(arguments);
writeDump (queryVar);
I have just started a new version of my Crysis Wars Server Side Modification called InfinityX. For better management, I have put the functions inside tables as it looks neater and I can group functions together (like Core.PlayerHandle:GetIp(player)), but I have ran into a problem.
The problem is that the specified method to get the players' name, player:GetName() is being seen as an invalid method, when the method actually is completely valid.
I would like to know if using the below structure is causing a problem and if so, how to fix it. This is the first time I've used this structure for functions, but it is already proving easier than the old method I was using.
The Code:
Event =
{
PlayerConnect = function(player)
Msg.All:CenteredConsole("$4Event$8 (Connect)$9: $3"..player:GetName().." on channel "..player.actor:GetChannel());
System.LogAlways(Default.Tag.."Incoming Connect on Channel "..player.actor:GetChannel());
Event:Log("Connect", player);
end;
};
The below code works when I bypass the function and put the code directly where it's needed:
Msg.All:CenteredConsole("$4Event$8 (Connect)$9: $3"..player:GetName().." on channel "..player.actor:GetChannel());
System.LogAlways(Default.Tag.."Incoming Connect on Channel "..player.actor:GetChannel());
The Error:
[Warning] [Lua Error] infinityx/main/core.events.lua:23: attempt to call method 'GetName' (a nil value)
PlayerConnect, (infinityx/main/core.events.lua: 23)
ConnectScript, (infinityx/main/core.main.lua: 52)
OnClientEnteredGame, (scripts/gamerules/instantaction.lua: 511)
(null) (scripts/gamerules/teaminstantaction.lua: 520)
Any clarification would be appreciated.
Thanks :)
Well, as PlayerConnect is inside the table Event, and you are calling with a ":", add self as first arg in the function, like:
PlayerConnect = function(self, player)
Clearly, player in the first block of code is not the same as player in the second block of code. The problem must be that the caller of Event.PlayerConnect is not passing the same value.
To test that your Event.PlayerConnect function works, try this in the same place as your second block of code:
Event.PlayerConnect(player)
That should work as you expect.
So, the problem comes down to how Event.PlayerConnect is called without the second block of code. I'm not familiar with that game engine so I don't know how it is done. Perhaps reviewing the documentation and/or debugging that area would help. If you print(player) or call the equivalent log function in both cases, you should see they are different. If you can't run in a debugger, you can still get a stack trace with print(debug.traceback("Accessing player, who's value is: "..player)). If there is indeed some kind of table-based player object in both cases, you can try comparing their fields to see how they are different. You might need to write a simple dumping function to help with that.
First, here the way i'm calling the function :
eval([functionName '(''stringArg'')']); % functionName = 'someStringForTheFunctionName'
Now, I have two functionName functions in my path, one that take the stringArg and another one that takes something else. I'm getting some errors because right now the first one it finds is the function that doesn't take the stringArg. Considering the way i'm calling the functionName function, how is it possible to call the correct function?
Edit:
I tried the function which :
which -all someStringForTheFunctionName
The result :
C:\........\x\someStringForTheFunctionName
C:\........\y\someStringForTheFunctionName % Shadowed
The shadowed function is the one i want to call.
Function names must be unique in MATLAB. If they are not, so there are duplicate names, then MATLAB uses the first one it finds on your search path.
Having said that, there are a few options open to you.
Option 1. Use # directories, putting each version in a separate directory. Essentially you are using the ability of MATLAB to apply a function to specific classes. So, you might set up a pair of directories:
#char
#double
Put your copies of myfun.m in the respective directories. Now when MATLAB sees a double input to myfun, it will direct the call to the double version. When MATLAB gets char input, it goes to the char version.
BE CAREFUL. Do not put these # directories explicitly on your search path. DO put them INSIDE a directory that is on your search path.
A problem with this scheme is if you call the function with a SINGLE precision input, MATLAB will probably have a fit, so you would need separate versions for single, uint8, int8, int32, etc. You cannot just have one version for all numeric types.
Option 2. Have only one version of the function, that tests the first argument to see if it is numeric or char, then branches to perform either task as appropriate. Both pieces of code will most simply be in one file then. The simple scheme will have subfunctions or nested functions to do the work.
Option 3. Name the functions differently. Hey, its not the end of the world.
Option 4: As Shaun points out, one can simply change the current directory. MATLAB always looks first in your current directory, so it will find the function in that directory as needed. One problem is this is time consuming. Any time you touch a directory, things slow down, because there is now disk input needed.
The worst part of changing directories is in how you use MATLAB. It is (IMHO) a poor programming style to force the user to always be in a specific directory based on what code inputs they wish to run. Better is a data driven scheme. If you will be reading in or writing out data, then be in THAT directory. Use the MATLAB search path to categorize all of your functions, as functions tend not to change much. This is a far cleaner way to work than requiring the user to migrate to specific directories based on how they will be calling a given function.
Personally, I'd tend to suggest option 2 as the best. It is clean. It has only ONE main function that you need to work with. If you want to keep the functions district, put them as separate nested or sub functions inside the main function body. Inside of course, they will have distinct names, based on how they are driven.
OK, so a messy answer, but it should do it. My test function was 'echo'
funcstr='echo'; % string representation of function
Fs=which('-all',funcstr);
for v=1:length(Fs)
if (strcmp(Fs{v}(end-1:end),'.m')) % Don''t move built-ins, they will be shadowed anyway
movefile(Fs{v},[Fs{v} '_BK']);
end
end
for v=1:length(Fs)
if (strcmp(Fs{v}(end-1:end),'.m'))
movefile([Fs{v} '_BK'],Fs{v});
end
try
eval([funcstr '(''stringArg'')']);
break;
catch
if (strcmp(Fs{v}(end-1:end),'.m'))
movefile(Fs{v},[Fs{v} '_BK']);
end
end
end
for w=1:v
if (strcmp(Fs{v}(end-1:end),'.m'))
movefile([Fs{v} '_BK'],Fs{v});
end
end
You can also create a function handle for the shadowed function. The problem is that the first function is higher on the matlab path, but you can circumvent that by (temporarily) changing the current directory.
Although it is not nice imo to change that current directory (actually I'd rather never change it while executing code), it will solve the problem quite easily; especially if you use it in the configuration part of your function with a persistent function handle:
function outputpars = myMainExecFunction(inputpars)
% configuration
persistent shadowfun;
if isempty(shadowfun)
funpath1 = 'C:\........\x\fun';
funpath2 = 'C:\........\y\fun'; % Shadowed
curcd = cd;
cd(funpath2);
shadowfun = #fun;
cd(curcd); % and go back to the original cd
end
outputpars{1} = shadowfun(inputpars); % will use the shadowed function
oupputpars{2} = fun(inputparts); % will use the function highest on the matlab path
end
This problem was also discussed here as a possible solution to this problem.
I believe it actually is the only way to overload a builtin function outside the source directory of the overloading function (eg. you want to run your own sum.m in a directory other than where your sum.m is located.)
EDIT: Old answer no longer good
The run command won't work because its a function, not a script.
Instead, your best approach would be honestly just figure out which of the functions need to be run, get the current dir, change it to the one your function is in, run it, and then change back to your start dir.
This approach, while not perfect, seems MUCH easier to code, to read, and less prone to breaking. And it requires no changing of names or creating extra files or function handles.
I'm having a problem with my code and I don't know what's up, I've searched online and the _Gx method was suggested as the best way over ones like loadstring(x)... although I would be happy with either, can't get either one to work. What I want to do is, in ComputerCraft, send a function name and argument to a turtle, which I'm doing by saving both values to a table and sending across the table, and then on the turtle's program, have a big list of functions, and using a command, call them from the string sent and insert the arg as well. My error is "attempt to call nil", which I don't quite understand why it's saying that... Thanks in Advance!
EDIT
I've edited my code down, as asked, to show that even stripping all else away, this still fails. I could even strip it down even more by taking the variable completely out, and putting the string straight into the _G. This still fails even doing it like that. I've decided to keep it in because that's how I am actually going to be using it later. Calling the function normally works fine. I'm using version Luaj-jse 2.0.3
function foo ()
print ("HI!")
end
print (_VERSION)
I don't know what rednet is, but it seems like you passes name of function to another Lua VM, which doesn't know anything about this function (this function is absent in that VM's globals table).
So, passing function definition as string and executing it by receiver with loadstring is the only solution.