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<h2>Startup HOWTO</h2>
<h3>To new Irssi users (not to new IRC users ..)</h3>
<p>Copyright (c) 2000-2001 by Timo Sirainen</p>
<p>Index with some FAQ questions that are answered in the chapter:</p>
<ol>
<li><a href="#c1">For all the lazy people</a></li>
<li><a href="#c2">Basic user interface usage</a></li>
<li><a href="#c3">Server and channel automation</a>
<ul>
<li>how do I automatically connect to servers at startup?</li>
<li>how do I automatically join to channels at startup?</li>
</ul></li>
<li><a href="#c4">Setting up windows and automatically restoring them
at startup</a></li>
<li><a href="#c5">Status and msgs windows &amp; message levels</a>
<ul>
<li>I want /WHOIS to print reply to current window</li>
<li>I want all messages to go to one window, not create new windows</li>
</ul></li>
<li><a href="#c6">How support for multiple servers works in irssi</a>
<ul>
<li>I connected to some server that doesn't respond and now irssi
keeps trying to reconnect to it again and again, how can I stop
it??</li>
<li>I want to have own status and/or msgs window for each servers</li>
</ul></li>
<li><a href="#c7">/LASTLOG and jumping around in scrollback</a>
<ul>
<li>How can I save all texts in a window to file?</li>
</ul></li>
<li><a href="#c8">Logging</a></li>
<li><a href="#c9">Proxies and IRC bouncers</a></li>
<li><a href="#c10">Irssi's settings</a></li>
</ol>
<h3><a id="c1">1. For all the lazy people</a></h3>
<p>These settings should give you pretty good defaults (the ones I use):</p>
<p>I don't like automatic query windows, I don't like status window, I do
like msgs window where all messages go:</p>
<pre>
/SET autocreate_own_query OFF
/SET autocreate_query_level DCCMSGS
/SET use_status_window OFF
/SET use_msgs_window ON
</pre>
<p>Disable automatic window closing when /PARTing channel or /UNQUERYing
query:</p>
<pre>
/SET autoclose_windows OFF
/SET reuse_unused_windows ON
</pre>
<p>And example how to add servers:</p>
<p>(openprojects network, identify with nickserv and wait for 2 seconds before
joining channels)</p>
<pre>
/IRCNET ADD -autosendcmd "/^msg nickserv ident pass;wait -opn 2000" opn
</pre>
<p>Then add some servers to different networks (ircnet is already set up
for them), irc.kpnqwest.fi is used by default for IRCNet but if it fails,
irc.funet.fi is tried next:</p>
<pre>
/SERVER ADD -auto -ircnet ircnet irc.kpnqwest.fi 6667
/SERVER ADD -ircnet ircnet irc.funet.fi 6667
/SERVER ADD -auto -ircnet efnet efnet.cs.hut.fi 6667
</pre>
<p>Automatically join to channels after connected to server, send op request
to bot after joined to efnet/#irssi:</p>
<pre>
/CHANNEL ADD -auto #irssi ircnet
/CHANNEL ADD -auto -bots *!*bot@host.org -botcmd "/^msg $0 op pass"
#irssi efnet
</pre>
If you want lines containing your nick to hilight:
<pre>
/HILIGHT nick
</pre>
<h3><a id="c2">2. Basic user interface usage</a></h3>
<p>Windows can be scrolled up/down with PgUp and PgDown keys. If they don't
work for you, use Meta-p and Meta-n keys. For jumping to beginning or end of
the buffer, use /SB HOME and /SB END commands.</p>
<p>By default, irssi uses "hidden windows" for everything. Hidden
window is created every time you /JOIN a channel or /QUERY someone.
There's several ways you can change between these windows:</p>
<pre>
Meta-1, Meta-2, .. Meta-0 - Jump directly between windows 1-10
Meta-q .. Meta-o - Jump directly between windows 11-19
/WINDOW &lt;number&gt; - Jump to any window with specified number
Ctrl-P, Ctrl-N - Jump to previous / next window
</pre>
<p>Clearly the easiest way is to use Meta-number keys. And what is the Meta
key? For some terminals, it's the same as ALT. If you have Windows keyboard,
it's probably the left Windows key. If they don't work directly, you'll need
to set a few X resources (NOTE: these work with both xterm and rxvt):</p>
<pre>
XTerm*eightBitInput: false
XTerm*metaSendsEscape: true
</pre>
<p>With rxvt, you can also specify which key acts as Meta key. So if you
want to use ALT instead of Windows key for it, use:</p>
<pre>
rxvt*modifier: alt
</pre>
<p>You could do this by changing the X key mappings:</p>
<pre>
xmodmap -e "keysym Alt_L = Meta_L Alt_L"
</pre>
<p>And how exactly do you set these X resources? For Debian, there's
/etc/X11/Xresources/xterm file where you can put them and it's read
automatically when X starts. ~/.Xresources and ~/.Xdefaults files might also
work. If you can't get anything else to work, just copy&amp;paste those lines to
~/.Xresources and directly call "xrdb -merge ~/.Xresources" in some xterm.
The resources affect only the new xterms you start, not existing ones.</p>
<p>Many windows SSH clients also don't allow usage of ALT. One excellent
client that does allow is putty, you can download it from
<a href="http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/">
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/</a>.</p>
<p>Irssi also supports split windows, they've had some problems in past
but I think they should work pretty well now :) Here's some commands
related to them:</p>
<pre>
/WINDOW NEW - Create new split window
/WINDOW NEW HIDE - Create new hidden window
/WINDOW CLOSE - Close split or hidden window
/WINDOW HIDE [&lt;number&gt;|&lt;name&gt;] - Make the split window hidden window
/WINDOW SHOW &lt;number&gt;|&lt;name&gt; - Make the hidden window a split window
/WINDOW SHRINK [&lt;lines&gt;] - Shrink the split window
/WINDOW GROW [&lt;lines&gt;] - Grow the split window
/WINDOW BALANCE - Balance the sizes of all split windows
</pre>
<p>By default, irssi uses "sticky windowing" for split windows. This means
that windows created inside one split window cannot be moved to another
split window without some effort. For example you could have following
window layout:</p>
<pre>
Split window 1: win#1 - Status window, win#2 - Messages window
Split window 2: win#3 - ircnet/#channel1, win#4 - ircnet/#channel2
Split window 3: win#5 - efnet/#channel1, win#6 - efnet/#channel2
</pre>
<p>When you are in win#1 and press ALT-6, irssi jumps to split window
#3 and moves the efnet/#channel2 the active window.</p>
<p>With non-sticky windowing the windows don't have any relationship with
split windows, pressing ALT-6 in win#1 moves win#6 to split window 1
and sets it active, except if win#6 was already visible in some other
split window irssi just changes to that split window. This it the way
windows work with ircii, if you prefer it you can set it with</p>
<pre>
/SET autostick_split_windows OFF
</pre>
<p>Each window can have multiple channels, queries and other "window
items" inside them. If you don't like windows at all, you disable
automatic creating of them with</p>
<pre>
/SET autocreate_windows OFF
</pre>
<p>If you want to group only some channels or queries in one window,
use</p>
<pre>
/JOIN -window #channel
/QUERY -window nick
</pre>
<h3><a id="c3">3. Server and channel automation</a></h3>
<p>Irssi's multiple IRC network support is IMHO very good - at least
compared to other clients :) Even if you're only in one IRC network you
should group all your servers to be in the same IRC network as this
helps with reconnecting if your primary server breaks and is probably
useful in some other ways too :) For information how to actually use
irssi correctly with multiple servers see the chapter 6.</p>
<p>First you need to have your IRC network set, use /IRCNET command to
see if it's already there. If it isn't, use /IRCNET ADD yourircnet. To
make Irssi work properly with different IRC networks, you might need to
give some special settings to /IRCNET ADD, see manual.txt for more
information about them. Irssi defaults to IRCNet's behaviour.</p>
<p>After that you need to add your servers. For example:</p>
<pre>
/SERVER ADD -auto -ircnet ircnet irc.kpnqwest.fi 6667
/SERVER ADD -auto -ircnet worknet irc.mycompany.com 6667 password
</pre>
<p>The -auto option specifies that this server is automatically connected
at startup. You don't need to make more than one server with -auto
option to one IRC network, other servers are automatically connected in
same network if the -auto server fails.</p>
<p>And finally channels:</p>
<pre>
/CHANNEL ADD -auto -bots *!*bot@host.org -botcmd "/^msg $0 op pass"
#irssi efnet
/CHANNEL ADD -auto #secret ircnet password
</pre>
<p>-bots and -botcmd should be the only ones needing a bit of
explaining. They're used to send commands automatically to bot when
channel is joined, usually to get ops automatically. You can specify
multiple bot masks with -bots option separated with spaces (and
remember to quote the string then). The $0 in -botcmd specifies the
first found bot in the list. If you don't need the bot masks (ie. the
bot is always with the same nick, like chanserv) you can give only the
-botcmd option and the command is always sent.</p>
<h3><a id="c4">4. Setting up windows and automatically restoring them at startup</a></h3>
<p>First connect to all the servers, join the channels and create the
queries you want. If you want to move the windows or channels around
use commands:</p>
<pre>
/WINDOW MOVE LEFT/RIGHT/number - move window elsewhere
/WINDOW ITEM MOVE &lt;number&gt;|&lt;name&gt; - move channel/query to another window
</pre>
<p>When everything looks the way you like, use /LAYOUT SAVE command
(and /SAVE, if you don't have autosaving enabled) and when you start
irssi next time, irssi remembers the positions of the channels, queries
and everything. This "remembering" doesn't mean that simply using
/LAYOUT SAVE would automatically make irssi reconnect to all servers
and join all channels, you'll need the /SERVER ADD -auto and /CHANNEL
ADD -auto commands to do that.</p>
<p>If you want to change the layout, you just rearrange the layout like
you want it and use /LAYOUT SAVE again. If you want to remove the
layout for some reason, use /LAYOUT RESET.</p>
<h3><a id="c5">5. Status and msgs windows &amp; message levels</a></h3>
<p>By default, all the "extra messages" go to status window. This means
pretty much all messages that don't clearly belong to some channel or
query. Some people like it, some don't. If you want to remove it, use</p>
<pre>
/SET use_status_window OFF
</pre>
<p>This doesn't have any effect until you restart irssi. If you want to
remove it immediately, just /WINDOW CLOSE it.</p>
<p>Another common window is "messages window", where all private
messages go. By default it's disabled and query windows are created
instead. To make all private messages go to msgs window, say:</p>
<pre>
/SET use_msgs_window ON
/SET autocreate_query_level DCCMSGS (or if you don't want queries to
dcc chats either, say NONE)
</pre>
<p>use_msgs_window either doesn't have any effect until restarting
irssi. To create it immediately say:</p>
<pre>
/WINDOW NEW HIDE - create the window
/WINDOW NAME (msgs) - name it to "(msgs)"
/WINDOW LEVEL MSGS - make all private messages go to this window
/WINDOW MOVE 1 - move it to first window
</pre>
<p>Note that neither use_msgs_window nor use_status_window have any
effect at all if /LAYOUT SAVE has been used.</p>
<p>This brings us to message levels.. What are they? All messages that
irssi prints have one or more "message levels". Most common are PUBLIC
for public messages in channels, MSGS for private messages and CRAP for
all sorts of messages with no real classification. You can get a whole
list of levels with</p>
<pre>
/HELP levels
</pre>
<p>Status window has message level "ALL -MSGS", meaning that all messages,
except private messages, without more specific place go to status
window. The -MSGS is there so it doesn't conflict with messages
window.</p>
<h3><a id="c6">6. How support for multiple servers works in irssi</a></h3>
<p>ircii and several other clients support multiple servers by placing
the connection into some window. IRSSI DOES NOT. There is no required
relationship between window and server. You can connect to 10 servers
and manage them all in just one window, or join channel in each one of
them to one sigle window if you really want to. That being said, here's
how you do connect to new server without closing the old connection:</p>
<pre>
/CONNECT irc.server.org
</pre>
<p>Instead of the /SERVER which disconnects the existing connection. To
see list of all active connections, use /SERVER without any parameters.
You should see a list of something like:</p>
<pre>
-!- IRCNet: irc.telia.fi:6667 (IRCNet)
-!- OPN: tolkien.openprojects.net:6667 (OPN)
-!- RECON-1: 192.168.0.1:6667 () (02:59 left before reconnecting)
</pre>
<p>Here you see that we're connected to IRCNet and OPN networks. The
the IRCNet at the beginning is called the "server tag" while the
(IRCnet) at the end shows the IRC network. Server tag specifies unique
tag to refer to the server, usually it's the same as the IRC network.
When the IRC network isn't known it's some part of the server name.
When there's multiple connections to same IRC network or server, irssi
adds a number after the tag so there could be ircnet, ircnet2, ircnet3
etc.</p>
<p>Server tags beginning with RECON- mean server reconnections. Above we
see that connection to server at 192.168.0.1 wasn't successful and
irssi will try to connect it again in 3 minutes.</p>
<p>To disconnect one of the servers, or to stop irssi from
reconnecting, use</p>
<pre>
/DISCONNECT ircnet - disconnect server with tag "ircnet"
/DISCONNECT recon-1 - stop trying to reconnect to RECON-1 server
/RMRECONNS - stop all server reconnections
/RECONNECT recon-1 - immediately try reconnecting back to RECON-1
/RECONNECT ALL - immediately try reconnecting back to all
servers in reconnection queue
</pre>
<p>Now that you're connected to all your servers, you'll have to know how
to specify which one of them you want to use. One way is to have an
empty window, like status or msgs window. In it, you can specify which
server to set active with</p>
<pre>
/WINDOW SERVER tag - set server "tag" active
Ctrl-X - set the next server in list active
</pre>
<p>When the server is active, you can use it normally. When there's
multiple connected servers, irssi adds [servertag] prefix to all
messages in non-channel/query messages so you'll know where it came
from.</p>
<p>Several commands also accept -servertag option to specify which server
it should use:</p>
<pre>
/MSG -tag nick message
/JOIN -tag #channel
/QUERY -tag nick
</pre>
<p>/MSG tab completion also automatically adds the -tag option when
nick isn't in active server.</p>
<p>Window's server can be made sticky. When sticky, it will never
automatically change to anything else, and if server gets disconnected, the
window won't have any active server. When the server gets connected again,
it is automatically set active in the window. To set the window's server
sticky use</p>
<pre>
/WINDOW SERVER -sticky tag
</pre>
<p>This is useful if you wish to have multiple status or msgs windows, one
for each server. Here's how to do them (repeat for each server)</p>
<pre>
/WINDOW NEW HIDE
/WINDOW NAME (status)
/WINDOW LEVEL ALL -MSGS
/WINDOW SERVER -sticky ircnet
/WINDOW NEW HIDE
/WINDOW NAME (msgs)
/WINDOW LEVEL MSGS
/WINDOW SERVER -sticky ircnet
</pre>
<h3><a id="c7">7. /LASTLOG and jumping around in scrollback</a></h3>
<p>/LASTLOG command can be used for searching texts in scrollback
buffer. Simplest usages are</p>
<pre>
/LASTLOG word - print all lines with "word" in them
/LASTLOG word 10 - print last 10 occurances of "word"
/LASTLOG -topics - print all topic changes
</pre>
<p>If there's more lines to be printed than 1000, irssi doesn't thinks
that you probably made some mistake and won't print them without -force
option. If you want to save the full lastlog to file, use</p>
<pre>
/LASTLOG -file ~/irc.log
</pre>
<p>With -file option you don't need -force even if there's more than 1000
lines. /LASTLOG has a lot of other options too, see /HELP lastlog for
details.</p>
<p>Once you've found the lines you were interested in, you might want
to check the discussion around them. Irssi has /SCROLLBACK (or alias
/SB) command for jumping around in scrollback buffer. Since /LASTLOG
prints the timestamp when the message was originally printed, you can
use /SB GOTO hh:mm to jump directly there. To get back to the bottom of
scrollback, use /SB END command.</p>
<h3><a id="c8">8. Logging</a></h3>
<p>Irssi can automatically log important messages when you're set away
(/AWAY reason). When you set yourself unaway (/AWAY), the new messages
in away log are printed to screen. You can configure it with:</p>
<pre>
/SET awaylog_level MSGS HILIGHT - Specifies what messages to log
/SET awaylog_file ~/.irssi/away.log - Specifies the file to use
</pre>
<p>Easiest way to start logging with Irssi is to use autologging. With it
Irssi logs all channels and private messages to specified directory.
You can turn it on with</p>
<pre>
/SET autolog ON
</pre>
<p>By default it logs pretty much everything execept CTCPS or CRAP
(/WHOIS requests, etc). You can specify the logging level yourself with</p>
<pre>
/SET autolog_level ALL -CRAP -CLIENTCRAP -CTCPS (this is the default)
</pre>
<p>By default irssi logs to ~/irclogs/&lt;servertag&gt;/&lt;target&gt;.log.
You can change this with</p>
<pre>
/SET autolog_path ~/irclogs/$tag/$0.log (this is the default)
</pre>
<p>The path is automatically created if it doesn't exist. $0 specifies
the target (channel/nick). You can make irssi automatically rotate the
logs by adding date/time formats to the file name. The formats are in
"man strftime" format. For example</p>
<pre>
/SET autolog_path ~/irclogs/%Y/$tag/$0.%m-%d.log
</pre>
<p>For logging only some specific channels or nicks, see /HELP log</p>
<h3><a id="c9">9. Proxies and IRC bouncers</a></h3>
<p>Irssi supports connecting to IRC servers via a proxy. All proxies have
these settings in common:</p>
<pre>
/SET use_proxy ON
/SET proxy_address &lt;Proxy host address&gt;
/SET proxy_port &lt;Proxy port&gt;
</pre>
<p><strong>HTTP proxy</strong></p>
<p>Use these settings with HTTP proxies:</p>
<pre>
/SET -clear proxy_password
/EVAL SET proxy_string CONNECT %s:%d\n\n
</pre>
<p><strong>BNC</strong></p>
<pre>
/SET proxy_password your_pass
/SET -clear proxy_string
/SET proxy_string conn %s %d
</pre>
<p><strong>dircproxy</strong></p>
<p>dircproxy separates the server connections by passwords. So, if you
for example have ircnet connection with password ircpass and
openprojects connection with opnpass, you would do something like
this:</p>
<pre>
/SET -clear proxy_password
/SET -clear proxy_string
/SERVER ADD -auto -ircnet ircnet fake.ircnet 6667 ircpass
/SERVER ADD -auto -ircnet opn fake.opn 6667 opnpass
</pre>
<p>The server name and port you give isn't used anywhere, so you can
put anything you want in there.</p>
<p><strong>Irssi proxy</strong></p>
<p>Irssi contains it's own proxy which you can build giving
<strong>--with-proxy</strong> option to configure. You'll still need to run
irssi in a screen to use it though.</p>
<p>Irssi proxy is a bit different than most proxies, normally proxies create
a new connection to IRC server when you connect to it, but with irssi proxy
all the clients use the same IRC server connection (a bit like how screen -x
works).</p>
<p>Irssi proxy supports sharing multiple server connections in different
ports, like you can share ircnet in port 2777 and efnet in port 2778.</p>
<p>Usage in proxy side:</p>
<pre>
/LOAD irc_proxy (/LOAD proxy in irssi 0.7.98.3 and older)
/SET irssiproxy_password &lt;password&gt;
/SET irssiproxy_ports &lt;ircnet&gt;=&lt;port&gt; ... (eg. ircnet=2777 efnet=2778)
</pre>
<p><strong>NOTE</strong>: you <strong>MUST</strong> add all the servers you
are using to server and ircnet lists with /SERVER ADD and /IRCNET ADD.
..Except if you really don't want to for some reason, and you only use
one server connection, you may simply set:</p>
<pre>
/SET irssiproxy_ports *=2777 (irssi 0.7.99 and later only)
</pre>
<p>Usage in client side:</p>
<p>Just connect to the irssi proxy like it is a normal server with password
specified in /SET irssiproxy_password. For example:</p>
<pre>
/SERVER ADD -ircnet ircnet my.irssi-proxy.org 2777 secret
/SERVER ADD -ircnet efnet my.irssi-proxy.org 2778 secret
</pre>
<p>Irssi proxy works fine with other IRC clients as well.</p>
<p><strong>SOCKS</strong></p>
Irssi can be compiled with socks support (<strong>--with-socks</strong>
option to configure), but I don't really know how it works, if at all. /SET
proxy settings don't have anything to do with socks however.
<p><strong>Others</strong></p>
<p>IRC bouncers usually work like IRC servers, and want a password. You can
give it with:</p>
<pre>
/SET proxy_password &lt;password&gt;
</pre>
<p>Irssi's defaults for connect strings are</p>
<pre>
/SET proxy_string CONNECT %s %d
/SET proxy_string_after
</pre>
<p>The proxy_string is sent before NICK/USER commands, the
proxy_string_after is sent after them. %s and %d can be used with both
of them.</p>
<h3><a id="c10">10. Irssi's settings</a></h3>
<p>You probably don't like Irssi's default settings. I don't like them.
But I'm still convinced that they're pretty good defaults. Here's some
of them you might want to change (the default value is shown):</p>
<p><strong>Queries</strong></p>
<dl>
<dt>/SET autocreate_own_query ON</dt>
<dd>Should new query window be created when you send message to someone
(with /msg).</dd>
<dt>/SET autocreate_query_level MSGS</dt>
<dd>New query window should be created when receiving messages with
this level. MSGS, DCCMSGS and NOTICES levels work currently. You can
disable this with /SET -clear autocrate_query_level.</dd>
<dt>/SET autoclose_query 0</dt>
<dd>Query windows can be automatically closed after certain time of
inactivity. Queries with unread messages aren't closed and active
window is neither never closed. The value is given in seconds.</dd>
</dl>
<p><strong>Windows</strong></p>
<dl>
<dt>/SET use_msgs_window OFF</dt>
<dd>Create messages window at startup. All private messages go to this
window. This only makes sense if you've disabled automatic query
windows. Message window can also be created manually with /WINDOW LEVEL
MSGS, /WINDOW NAME (msgs).</dd>
<dt>/SET use_status_window ON</dt>
<dd>Create status window at startup. All messages that don't really
have better place go here, like all /WHOIS replies etc. Status window
can also be created manually with /WINDOW LEVEL ALL -MSGS, /WINDOW NAME
(status).</dd>
<dt>/SET autocreate_windows ON</dt>
<dd>Should we create new windows for new window items or just place
everything in one window</dd>
<dt>/SET autoclose_windows ON</dt>
<dd>Should window be automatically closed when the last item in them is
removed (ie. /PART, /UNQUERY).</dd>
<dt>/SET reuse_unused_windows OFF</dt>
<dd>When finding where to place new window item (channel, query) Irssi
first tries to use already existing empty windows. If this is set ON,
new window will always be created for all window items. This setting is
ignored if autoclose_windows is set ON.</dd>
<dt>/SET window_auto_change OFF</dt>
<dd>Should Irssi automatically change to automatically created windows
- usually queries when someone sends you a message. To prevent
accidentally sending text meant to some other channel/nick, Irssi
clears the input buffer when changing the window. The text is still in
scrollback buffer, you can get it back with pressing arrow up key.</dd>
<dt>/SET print_active_channel OFF</dt>
<dd>When you keep more than one channel in same window, Irssi prints
the messages coming to active channel as &quot;&lt;nick&gt; text&quot;
and other channels as &quot;&lt;nick:channel&gt; text&quot;. If this
setting is set ON, the messages to active channels are also printed in
the latter way.</dd>
<dt>/SET window_history OFF</dt>
<dd>Should command history be kept separate for each window.</dd>
</dl>
<p><strong>User information</strong></p>
<dl>
<dt>/SET nick</dt>
<dd>Your nick name</dd>
<dt>/SET alternate_nick</dt>
<dd>Your alternate nick.</dd>
<dt>/SET user_name</dt>
<dd>Your username, if you have ident enabled this doesn't affect
anything</dd>
<dt>/SET real_name</dt>
<dd>Your real name.</dd>
</dl>
<p><strong>Server information</strong></p>
<dl>
<dt>/SET skip_motd OFF</dt>
<dd>Should we hide server's MOTD (Message Of The Day).</dd>
<dt>/SET server_reconnect_time 300</dt>
<dd>Seconds to wait before connecting to same server again. Don't set
this too low since it usually doesn't help at all - if the host is
down, the few extra minutes of waiting won't hurt much.</dd>
<dt>/SET lag_max_before_disconnect 300</dt>
<dd>Maximum server lag in seconds before disconnecting and trying to
reconnect. This happens mostly only when network breaks between you and
IRC server.</dd>
</dl>
<p><strong>Appearance</strong></p>
<dl>
<dt>/SET timestamps ON</dt>
<dd>Show timestamps before each message.</dd>
<dt>/SET hide_text_style OFF</dt>
<dd>Hide all bolds, underlines, MIRC colors, etc.</dd>
<dt>/SET show_nickmode ON</dt>
<dd>Show the nick's mode before nick in channels, ie. ops have
&lt;@nick&gt;, voices &lt;+nick&gt; and others &lt;&nbsp;nick&gt;</dd>
<dt>/SET show_nickmode_empty ON</dt>
<dd>If the nick doesn't have a mode, use one space. ie. ON:
&lt;&nbsp;nick&gt;, OFF: &lt;nick&gt;</dd>
<dt>/SET show_quit_once OFF</dt>
<dd>Show quit message only once in some of the channel windows the
nick was in instead of in all windows.</dd>
<dt>/SET topicbar ON</dt>
<dd>Show the channel's topic in top of screen.</dd>
<dt>/SET lag_min_show 100</dt>
<dd>Show the server lag in status bar if it's bigger than this, the
unit is 1/100 of seconds (ie. the default value of 100 = 1 second).</dd>
<dt>/SET indent 10</dt>
<dd>When lines are longer than screen width they have to be split to
multiple lines. This specifies how much space to put at the beginning
of the line before the text begins. This can be overridden in text
formats with %| format.</dd>
<dt>/SET activity_hide_targets</dt>
<dd>If you don't want to see window activity in some certain channels
or queries, list them here. For example "#boringchannel =bot1 =bot2".
If any highlighted text or message for you appears in that window, this
setting is ignored and the activity is shown.</dd>
<dt>/SET mail_counter ON</dt>
<dd>Show the number of mails in your mbox in status
bar. The mbox file is taken from $MAIL environment setting. Only mbox
format works for now.</dd>
</dl>
<p><strong>Nick completion</strong></p>
<dl>
<dt>/SET completion_auto OFF</dt>
<dd>Automatically complete the nick if line begins with start of nick
and the completion character. Learn to use the tab-completion instead,
it's a lot better ;)</dd>
<dt>/SET completion_char :</dt>
<dd>Completion character to use.</dd>
</dl>