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Chocolatier (video game) Chocolatier 2: Secret Ingredients; Chocolatier: Decadence by Design; Civilization V; Civilization VI; Command: Modern Air Naval Operations; Company of Heroes (video game) Cortex Command; Crackdown (video game) Crysis (video game)
RetroShare encrypted filesharing, serverless email, instant messaging, online chat and BBS software, has a Lua plugin for automation and control. Roblox is a game platform with its own game engine. It uses a modified version of Lua 5.1 called Luau. [28] Rockbox, the open-source digital audio player firmware, supports plugins written in Lua.
In video game development, Lua is widely used as a scripting language, mainly due to its perceived easiness to embed, fast execution, and short learning curve. [25] Notable games which use Lua include Roblox, [26] Garry's Mod, World of Warcraft, Payday 2, Phantasy Star Online 2, Dota 2, Crysis, [27] and many others.
An IRC bot performing a simple task. An IRC bot is a set of scripts or an independent program that connects to Internet Relay Chat as a client, and so appears to other IRC users as another user. An IRC bot differs from a regular client in that instead of providing interactive access to IRC for a human user, it performs automated functions.
fortune is a program that displays a pseudorandom message from a database of quotations. Early versions of the program appeared in Version 7 Unix in 1979. [1] The most common version on modern systems is the BSD fortune, originally written by Ken Arnold. [2]
Glider, also known as WoWGlider or MMOGlider, was a bot created by MDY Industries, which interoperated with World of Warcraft.Glider automated and simplified actions by the user through the use of scripting to perform repetitive tasks while the user was away from the computer.
Some fortune cookie sayings will leave you with wise, inspiring words. Some will leave you laughing so much that you cry. The post 25 Fortune Cookie Sayings You Can’t Help but Laugh At appeared ...
This is a list of all Internet Relay Chat commands from RFC 1459, RFC 2812, and extensions added to major IRC daemons. Most IRC clients require commands to be preceded by a slash (" / "). Some commands are actually sent to IRC bots ; these are treated by the IRC protocol as ordinary messages, not as / -commands.