Welcome to Pesterchum 3.41!
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WHAT'S NEW?
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* Check out the CHANGELOG file to see what's changed!
What do I do now?
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Most questions can be answered by visiting the forums! Go to HELP->HELP
and you'll be transported to the proper thread!
Here's some tips to help you get started:
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- Some themes can be confusing if you haven't used the program
already! Some hints:
* Trollian: Moods are set by clicking the timelines, and you
can add chums by clicking "Chumproll." Moods correspond to the troll
that would most likely exhibit them. You can go offline by hitting the
"Timelines" menu bar.
* Gold: Add chums by hitting the two chumpeoples in the upper left
corner. Go offline by clicking the "CHUMHANDLE:" label.
* Enamel: Add chums by hitting the "CHUMROLL" label. Go offline by
clicking the upper left hand corner.
- Right-click is your friend! There are useful right click
options on the chumroll, by clicking the chumhandle in a conversation,
online userlist, or the list of memo browsers.
Cool features:
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- Profile switching. Instantly switch profiles, loading your color and
quirks with it.
- Theme switching and creation. So far this comes with a few official
themes! But you can also make your own: just make a new directory in
the themes folder with the proper images and style.js file. The
style.js file will be documented soon, but feel free to poke at it.
- Memos. Memos that are a lot more like the ones in the comic and
allow you to appear at multiple times in one chat.
- Quirks: Prefix, suffix, simple replace, regexp replace (like in
2.5), random replacement, and an auto-mispeller :P
- Chum groups. Organize your chums into collapsible groups for easy
management.
- Block/user list
- Add/block chums directly from a conversation, the userlist, or memo
userlist.
- Timestamps saved in logs and shown in conversations if wanted.
- Logging. Logs are output in bbcode (for easy forum posting), html,
and plain text.
- Logviewer for easy log reading inside Pesterchum
- Idling. You can set yourself idle manually, and the computer will
set it for you after a configurable amount of time.
- Improved /me. Any letters immediately following /me will be
processed correctly. e.g. /me'd rather be fishing -> -- ghostDunk'd
[GD'D] rather be fishing --
- Hyperlinks! Now if someone types http://whatever it will turn into a
link you can just click and follow. No more copy/paste.
- Memo links. Link your friends to your memos.
- Smilies. We've added about 30-40 smilies from the forums. There is a
list later on in this readme.
- Submit quotes directly to the Pesterchum QDB!
FA%
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Q: Norton says it has a virus and then deletes it!
A: Read this helpful Norton FAQ:
Alright, here's a guide to by-passing Norton:
* First, to download Pesterchum:
1. Make sure you're on a Moderator account. Moreso for the Norton steps than these ones.
2. Download the .zip file, not the .exe file.
3. Unzip the .zip file onto memory. Pesterchum should now be installed.
* Now, to by-pass Norton:
1. Make sure you're still on a moderator account.
2. Open up Norton.
3. Click on 'Settings' up in the upperright hand corner.
4. Click on 'Anitivirus', off to the upper left. It has a small image of a needle or something similar off to it's side.
5. There's a word that reads 'SONAR protection' halfway to the bottomleft. Off to it's right, there's a bar that's half green. Click on the bar.
6. It will warn you about turning off SONAR. Have it set to turn back on when the system restarts.
7. If done properly, the background for the main page of Norton(what you saw on steps 2-3) has turned an apocaliptic red. Feel free to close Norton now. Keep in mind to stay off suspicious online sites now.
8. Open up Pesterchum, and let the chummy convos begin.
* When finished:
1. Log off of Pesterchum. LOG OFF, NOT CLOSE IT.
2. Then, you can either shut off your comp, and Norton will re-enable SONAR, or you can repeat steps 1-5, except turning the red bar green. If done right, Norton will be it's happy color again.
3, Keep in mind that you must repeat all of this(other than the download) every time you want to get on Pesterchum.
* Hope this is helpful!
(This guide brought to you by the slightly combined efforts of empireomega and Xanaomin)
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Q: I can't connect because my school/university/network/stolen wifi is blocking my connection! OR I can't seem to connect to the server at all and I'm not running any firewalls!
A: Edit your pesterchum.js file. Open it up in notepad or something, and then edit the beginning so it looks like this:
{"port": "1413", ....
where the .... is the rest of the gobbledygook there.
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Q: The mood buttons on Pesterchum 6.0 don't match up to what it sets your mood to! What gives?
A: The mood names are just there to look canon. It is intentional.
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Q: I'm appearing as offline to 2.5 users/other users appear the wrong
mood? What's happeninggggg
A: The 2.5 people decided to change the mood protocol. When I made
this program, I decided to go with Tinychat's original protocol (and
extend it). So some moods will appear wrong between 2.5
users. (*COUGH*tell them to switch to 3.14*COUGH*)
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Q: Pesterchum 2.5 users don't get my /me messages correctly!
A: That's because they implemented the /me command differently.
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Q: Can we resize the main window?
A: No. This is done so we can offer more flexible UI creation. It's a
lot easier to make themes that look canon this way.
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Q: Can we have different chum rolls for different users?
A: No. Instead what we now have crum groups to organize people.
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Q: Can we delete profiles?
A: Yes. Go to the profile switcher, choose a profile and press DELETE.
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Q: You should make it so you can ban specific time frames in memos.
A: This was too complicated to implement, and I don't have the UI
quite figured out. This will probably go in a future update.
DOCUMENTATION
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STARTING
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If this is your first time running Pesterchum 3.14, you need to create
a new profile. Just type in your chum handle in the box and click the
color swatch to pick your color. Check the "default" checkbox to make
this your default profile.
BASIC PESTERING
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To begin pestering, first click the "ADD CHUM" button and type in
their pester handle. The handle must be all lower case except for one
capital letter. Once you've added that person, they will appear on
your chumroll. You can double click to begin pestering them, or
right-click to bring up a menu where you can pester them, block them,
or remove them from your chumroll. (Or you can select them and hit
"enter" OR hit the "PESTER" button.)
Once you begin pestering somebody (or they begin pestering you), it
will bring up the conversation window. Here you can type to your
chum. Also remember that if you right-click on the area just above the
Pesterlog, it will bring up a list of options: Quirks Off will turn
your quirks off, Add Chum will add this chum to your list, and Block
will block them. (Those last two options are useful if you are being
pestered by someone you don't have on your list yet!)
While pestering your chum, here are some useful features:
* Type /me to create a system message. "/me facepalms." will generate:
-- ghostDunk [GD] facepalms. --
You can also append 's after /me like so: "/me's computer exploded."
-- ghostDunk's [GD'S] computer exploded. --
In fact, any characters you type after a /me before the space will
be added: "/meing is the Ghost Nation's official pastime."
-- ghostDunking [GDING] is the Ghost Nation's official pastime. --
* Color tags! If you feel the need to talk about The Green Sun or add
some appleberry blast to your conversation, just use color
tags. These work like in TC 1.5:
PREFIX: ":33 < " You type: "*ac twitches her friendly whiskers at ct*" Result: AC: :33 < *ac twitches her friendly whiskers at ct*
PREFIX: "D --> " You type: "Hi" Result: CT: D --> HiSuffixes work the same way, but at the end of the message:
SUFFIX: "!!!" You type: hey there Result: GD: hey there!!!Remember that it doesn't automatically add a space! You'll need to add it in (see CT and AC examples again!) * Simple Replace: This will simply take a set of characters and replace them with other characters. * Let's add a quirk to our Nepeta:
Replace: "ee" With: "33" You type: "*ac saunters from her dark cave a little bit sleepy from the recent kill*" Result: AC: :33 < *ac saunters from her dark cave a little bit sl33py from the recent kill** Let's add two to Equius:
Replace: "loo" With: "100" Replace: "x" With "%" You type: "look" Result: CT: D --> 100k You type: "What are you expecting to accomplish with this" Result: CT: D --> What are you e%pecting to accomplish with this* Aradia:
Replace: "o" With: "0" You type: "and the reward would be within our reach" Result: AA: and the reward w0uld be within 0ur reachNotice that it is CASE SENSITIVE. So in the above case, if you typed "ABSCOND", it would not replace the "O". * Sollux:
Replace: "i" With: "ii" Replace: "s" With: "2"* Eridan:
Replace: "v" With: "vv" Replace: "w" With: "ww"* Feferi:
Replace: "h" with: ")(" Replace: "H" with: ")(" Replace: "E" with: "-E"* Regexp Replace: This is a more complex kind of replacement. Regexp stands for "regular expression", a kind of programming language (yes, it is a language) used to find and replace text. PC 3.14 also includes a function to handle capitalization (upper()). If you want to learn it on your own, I suggest you start with the Python tutorial (http://docs.python.org/howto/regex.html) since PC 3.14 uses Python's regexps. Check out V2.5's tutorial too, as that is a pretty good start as well. * Let's start with Karkat. Regexps are just like your every day find and replace: they search for a string that matches what you want to replace, and replaces it with... the replacement.
Regexp: "(.)" Replace with: "upper(\1)"Three concepts here. Let's look at the regexp. "(.)" has two things going on. The first is that ".". In regexp speak, "." is the wildcard: it will match *any* character -- and just one. The parentheses tell the regexp to *save* what's inside them so you can put it back when you replace. That's what the "\1" is for -- it means, "put the match inside parentheses #1 here". You can have any number of parentheses. * "upper()" is a function special to PC 3.14 -- it will uppercase anything inside the parentheses. So in this case, upper will uppercase "\1" -- which, as you recall is what we found inside the parentheses. Which was *every* character. So to sum up, it replaces every character with an uppercase version of that character. WHICH MAKES YOU TALK LIKE THIS. * Let's look at Terezi next.
Regexp: "[aA]" Replace with: "4" Regexp: "[iI]" Replace with: "1" Regexp: "[eE]" Replace with: "3" Regexp: "(.)" Replace with: "upper(\1)"We already know what the last line does. But what's up with those brackets? What's their deal? Basically, in regular expressions, brackets indicate a list of matching characters. So, basically any single character within the brackets will be matched. In this case, either "a" or "A" will be matched and replaced with "4," and likewise, "i" and "I" will be replaced with "1", and "e" and "E" will be replaced with "3." Just like there is an "upper()" function, there is also a "lower()" function. It acts just like "upper()" but instead makes everything inside the parentheses lowercase. This allows you to do things like:
Regexp: "(.)" Replace with: "lower(\1)" You type: "I AM YELLING" Result: GD: i am yellingAlong with the upper and lower functions is a "scramble()" function. The purpose of this function is to randomly scramble anything inside the parentheses.
Regexp: "(\w)(\w*)(\w)" Replace with: "\1scramble(\2)\3" You type: "hello there" Result: GD: hlelo trheeThis particular regular expression scrambles all of the letters in the middle of a word. Notice that the "h" and "o" at the beginning and end of hello remain in place while the other letters are scrambled. You should also know that "^" is a special character in brackets. If placed immediately after the opening bracket (like "[^"), then the brackets instead match every character *except* the ones in the brackets. So, for example, if you wanted to have a quirk where you capitalized all your letters *except* o, you'd do this:
Regexp: "([^o])" Replace with: "upper(\1)" You type: "hello there" Result: GD: HELLo THEREYou can also specify a *range* of characters inside the brackets, by using the "-" character. [a-z] will match any lowercase letter. You can combine them, too: [a-z0-9] will match any digit and lowercase letter. There are also different shortcuts for character types:
\d matches any digit; same as [0-9] \D matches any non-digit; same as [^0-9] \s matches any spaces \S matches any non-space \w matches any alphanumeric character; same as [a-zA-Z0-9_] \W matches any non-alphanumeric character; same as [^a-zA-Z0-9_]You can include this inside brackets, too. There's also a special character, \\b. What \\b does is make sure that you are at the beginning or end of a word. * So with that knowledge, let's try Kanaya:
Regexp: \b(\w) Replace with: upper(\1) You type: "i suggest you come to terms with it" Result: GA: I Suggest You Come To Terms With ItAnother feature of regular expressions is the ability to match *repeated* characters. There are three repeat characters: the "\*", the "+", "?", and "{m,n}". They work by playing them after the character, or character type you want to match. (So, you could say "\s+" or ".*") The "\*" character matches ZERO or more of that character. So, for example, "f\*" would match "f" and "ff" -- and any other character! That's right, every character counts as matching it zero times. Yeah, it's weird. I suggest you use... The "+" character matches ONE or more of that character. So, if we wanted to have a character that wanted to elongate their s's so that they used four 's's every time, like sssso, but didn't want to have eight s's when using words with double s's, like pass, we'd do this:
Regexp: "s+" Replace with: "ssss" You type: "you shall not pass" Result: UU: you sssshall not passssAs for the other two, I can't really think of any useful quirks to be made with them. But to let you know, "?" matches either 0 or 1 of that character, so "trolls?" would match "troll" and "trolls". "{m,n}" matches between m and n characters. (If you leave out 'n', any number of characters more than m will be matched.) So "s{2,4}" will match "ss", "sss", and "ssss" and that's it. Now with repeating expressions, we can do something like make EVERY other WORD capitalized:
Regexp: "(\w+) (\w+)" Replace with: "upper(\1) \2" You type: "this is pretty annoying i bet" Result: GD: THIS is PRETTY annoying I betThe \1 matches the first word -- which has been matched because the word is alphanumeric characters, repeated once or more -- and \2 matches the second word. Another operator to use is the "|", which will match more than one set of characters. For example, "black|red" will match "black" or "red". If you want to match something in the middle of words, you have to use parentheses: "(black|red) romance" will match "black romance" and "red romance". Finally, there are the "^" and "$" characters. Yes, we already did the "^" character, but this is OUTSIDE of brackets, not INSIDE. "^" matches the beginning of a message, and "$" matches the end of it. You can use this to make more sophisticated prefix and suffix behaviors. For example, if we have a quirk that adds "..." to the end of all our messages, we can set it up so it doesn't do that if we put punctuation [?!.] at the end. So:
Regexp: "([^?!.])$" Replace with: "\1..."This will match the end of any message as long as it doesn't have "?", "!", or "." at the end. Then it will replace it with whatever the last character of the sentence was (remember we're replacing it, so we have to put it back!) and add "..." at the end. Careful with the beginning and ending replaces -- if you use more than one, you may not get what you expect because they will ALL be applied, one after the other! This is a bug in my opinion, that I plan to fix! * Random replace: Just like the regexp replace, except that instead of just one thing to replace it with, you give it a list. PC will then choose from that list randomly. So let's say I want to randomly end my sentences with either "bro" or "dog":
Regexp: "$" Replace with: "bro" and "dog"* You can also imitate Araida's random "ribbits" in between words:
Regexp: "\s" Replace with: " ribbit ", " ", " ", " ", " ", " ", etc....where " " is just a blank space added a bunch of times. (You can see how many blank spaces you've added by clicking on the list.) You have to add the spaces because each entry has the same chance of being selected. (Yes, I know this could be improved.) If you add " ribbit " and 9 spaces, " ribbit " will have a 1/10 chance of being picked. Also note that if you add more than one prefix or more than one suffix, it will pick randomly from them instead of adding them both! * Mispeller: Be careful with thsi one. The mispeller will randomly mispell x% of the words you type -- where x is the percentage you set the slider to. I have attempted to mimic SBaHJ mispelling style but whoof knows what will happen oh god ive created a mosnter SMILIES ------- Here's a list of smilies: * :rancorous: * :apple: * :bathearst: * :cathearst: * :woeful: * :pleasant: * :blueghost: * :slimer: * :candycorn: * :cheer: * :duhjohn: * :datrump: * :facepalm: * :bonk: * :mspa: * :gun: * :cal: * :amazedfirman: * :amazed: * :chummy: * :cool: * :smooth: * :distraughtfirman * :distraught: * :insolent: * :bemused: * :3: * :mystified: * :pranky: * :tense: * :record: * :squiddle: * :tab: * :beetip: * :flipout: * :befuddled: * :pumpkin: * :trollcool: * :jadecry: * :ecstatic: * :relaxed: * :discontent: * :devious: * :sleek: * :detestful: * :mirthful: * :manipulative: * :vigorous: * :perky: * :acceptant: * :olliesouty: * :billiards: * :billiardslarge: * :whatdidyoudo: