Implicit concatenation
Implicit concatenation eliminates the need to precede User Language variables (including methods chained off a variable) and literals with the operator With
to indicate concatenation. For example, the following statement sets %foo
to the contents of %test
enclosed within parentheses:
%foo = "(" %test ")"
And the following statement sets %foo
to the reversed, right-most 4 characters of %test
enclosed within parentheses:
%foo = "(" %test:right(4):reverse ")"
If %nal
is a Named Arraylist of String, implicit concatenation lets you assign to %foo
value of item %x +1
embedded inside single quotes:
%foo = "'" %nal(%x + 1) "'"
The at sign (@) will also be implicitly concatenated if not preceded by an operator. For example, the follow concatenates a "==>" to the current contents of %string
and assigns it to %string
:
%string = '==>' @
In Sirius Mods 8.1 and later, the results of a $function will also be implicitly concatenated with the preceding expression results:
%message = "The problem happened at " $time " on " $date "."
With is still required before field names:
%foo = '>>' with FIELD NAME
And With is still required before expressions in parentheses:
%foo = '>>' with (%x + 2)