SigServer:SignatureMath

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Language Reference

Basic Syntax

Before the XML is parsed the Signature engine looks for opening and closing tags ({{ and }}). Everything between those are interpreted as Signature Math (from now on abbreviated SigMath) and parsed before the XML parser takes action. Every opening tag must be followed by a closing tag.

Example

<text>
  <line>{{ 2 + 3 }}</line>
</text>

The example above will output 5 on the signature.

Types

SigMath supports types.

  • Number
  • String
  • Boolean

Number may be either float or integer.

Example: Numbers

1

The above example is classified as a number.

1.1

This example is also classified as a number.

"1"

This is too a number, because a check is performed on every string to see whether it is a number or not.

-1

This is a negative number. As of version 1.1.0, they are now supported without hacks.

Example: Strings

"string"
'string'
" 1"

All three examples are strings. Both " and ' may be used with strings. You cannot escape anything inside a string. This means {{ "}}" }} or {{ "\"" }} gives you an error message.

Example: Boolean

true
false

Boolean values may only be lower case.

Operators

SigMath supports some basic operators. Arithmetic operators have the highest priority. Comparison operators have the second highest priority. Logic operators have the least priority. Brackets may be used to group expressions, such as (1 + 2) * 3 = 9.

Arithmetic Operators

+
Adds two numbers. If one of the arguments are a string the second argument will be appnended to the first.
-
Subracts two numbers.
*
Takes the first argument times the second.
/
Divides the first argument with the second.

Comparison Operators

<
Checks if the first argument is smaller than the second. If so true is returned.
>
Checks if the first argument is bigger than the second. If so true is returned.
<=
Checks if the first argument is smaller than or equal to the second. If so true is returned.
>=
Checks if the first argument is bigger than or equal to the second. If so true is returned.
==
Checks if the first argument is equal to the second. If so true is returned.
!=
Checks if the first argument is not equal to the second. If so true is returned.

Logic Operators

||
Checks if the first argument or the second argument are true. If so true is returned.
&&
Checks if the first argument and the second argument are true. If so true is returned.
!
Returns the opposite of the immediately following boolean value.

Variables

SigMath has support for variables. It supports both AniDB variables and user defined. AniDB variables are prefixed with $ and user defined variables with @.

Example

{{ $example }}
{{ @example }}

The first block outputs the AniDB variable named example. The second block outputs the user defined variable named example. A user defined variable may have the same name as an AniDB variable. The variables are only alphanumeric and may contain _ as well.

Setting a variable is quite straight-forward.

Example

{{ @example = "Where's the money Lebowski?" }}

This will set the variable @example to Where's the money Lebowski?. It's possible to redefine variables throughout the code.

Example

{{ @example = "Where's the money Lebowski?" }}
{{ @example = @example + " said Boris" }}

This will set the variable @example to Where's the money Lebowski? said Boris.

This method can override AniDB variables.

Functions

SigMath supports a range of functions. Arguments are separated by comma, and each argument is evaluated before it is passed on to the function. For a complete list of all functions see the function reference.

Function Reference

Mathematical

abs

number abs(number value)

Returns the absolute value of a number

Example:

{{ abs(1) }}  <!-- Returns 1 -->
{{ abs(-1) }} <!-- Returns 1 -->

ceil

number ceil(number value)

Returns the ceiling of a number.

Example:

{{ ceil(1.4) }} <!-- Returns 2 -->
{{ ceil(1.9) }} <!-- Returns 2 -->

div

number div(number dividend, number divisor)

Returns the integer quotient when dividing dividend with divider.

Example:

{{ div(10, 3) }} <!-- Returns 3 -->

floor

number floor(number value)

Returns the floor of a number.

Example:

{{ floor(1.1) }} <!-- Returns 1 -->
{{ floor(1.9) }} <!-- Returns 1 -->

max

number max(number value1, number value2[, number ...])

Returns the numerically highest value of the given arguments. At least two arguments are required.

Example:

{{ max(3, 5) }}           <!-- Returns 5 -->
{{ max(3, 1.2, 5, 5.1) }} <!-- Returns 5.1 -->

min

number min(number value1, number value2[, number ...])

Returns the numerically lowest value of the given arguments. At least two arguments are required.

Example:

{{ min(3, 5) }}           <!-- Returns 3 -->
{{ min(3, 1.2, 5, 5.1) }} <!-- Returns 1.2 -->

mod

number mod(number dividend, number divisor)

Returns the reminder when dividing dividend with divider.

Example:

{{ mod(10, 3) }} <!-- Returns 1 -->

pow

number pow(number base, number exp)

Returns base to the power of exp.

Example:

{{ pow(3, 2) }} <!-- Returns 9 -->
{{ pow(2, 3) }} <!-- Returns 8 -->

random

number random(number start, number end)

Returns a random integer from the set of integers starting at start and ending at end.

Example:

{{ random(1, 10) }}  <!-- Returns a random integer from 1 to 10 -->
{{ random(0, 100) }} <!-- Returns a random integer from 0 to 100 -->

round

number round(number value[, number precision])

Returns a rounded number with the given precision. If precision isn't specified it will return an integer.

Example:

{{ round(2.4) }}     <!-- Returns 2 -->
{{ round(2.5) }}     <!-- Returns 3 -->
{{ round(2.55, 1) }} <!-- Returns 2.6 -->

sqrt

number sqrt(number value)

Returns the square root of value.

Example:

{{ sqrt(9) }} <!-- Returns 3 -->

Miscellaneous

date

string date(string format[, string time[, number offset]])
string date(string format[, number timestamp[, number offset]])
string date(string format, "now"[, number offset])

Returns the date and time in the format specified by the first argument. The format syntax is the same as PHP's date(). The first optional argument may be either:

  • a string with date
  • a Unix timestamp
  • the string "now", in the case you want to use the third argument with the current timestamp

The second optional argument specifies the number of seconds to add or subtract from the specified time. This is useful if you want to shift all dates in your signature to a different timezone than the server is running on.

Example:

{{ date("Y-m-d") }}                        <!-- Returns current date e.g. "2007-11-20" -->
{{ date("H:i:s") }}                        <!-- Returns current time, e.g. "19:50:37" -->
{{ date("Y-m-d", "1995-10-03T20:30:37") }} <!-- Returns date "1995-10-03" -->
{{ date("Y-m-d H:i:s", "1995-10-03T20:30:37", -7200) }} <!-- Returns "1995-10-03 18:30:37" -->

fetchvar

string fetchvar(string variable)

Returns the variable given as an argument.

Example:

{{ @test1 = "Hi!" }}
{{ fetchvar("@test1") }}    <!-- Returns "Hi!" -->
{{ fetchvar("@test" + 1) }} <!-- Returns "Hi!" -->

{{ @test2 = 1 }}
{{ fetchvar("$latestwatched_id" + @test2 + "_aname") }} <!-- Returns the name of the latest watched anime -->

fsformat

string fsformat(number sizeInMiB[, number decimals[, boolean tenBasedExponents ]])

Formats the given file size according to the given parameters, using the most fitting unit for its size. File sizes should be expressed in MiB, as given by the system provided variables. The decimals argument specifies how many decimal numbers should be printed after the decimal point; the default value is 2. By default, 2n based units are used (1 GiB = 210 MiB = 1024 MiB), but this can be toggled to use 10n based units instead (1 GB = 103 MB = 1000 MB) by setting the third argument to true.

Example:

{{ fsformat(1024) }} <!-- Returns "1.00 GiB" -->
{{ fsformat(1024, 2, true) }} <!-- Returns "1.02 GB" -->
{{ fsformat(1048576, 0) }} <!-- Returns "1 TiB" -->
{{ fsformat(1234, 6) }} <!-- Returns "1.205078 GiB" -->

if

Alias of notempty()

lc

Alias of lowercase()

length

number length(string value)

Returns the number of characters of the string.

Example:

{{ length("Foobar") }}   <!-- Returns 6 -->
{{ length("") }}         <!-- Returns 0 -->
{{ length("Foo bar.") }} <!-- Returns 8 -->

lengthw

number lengthw(mixed string[, string font[, number size]])

Returns width of given string in pixels. Default font is verdana. Default size is 12 pixels.

Example:

{{ lengthw("Foobar") }}               <!-- Returns 54 -->
{{ lengthw("") }}                     <!-- Returns 2, due to the way the bounding box works. -->
{{ lengthw("Foobar", "comic", 10) }}  <!-- Returns 55 -->

lowercase

string lowercase(mixed value[, string options])

If only first argument is specified it converts all the characters to lower case. The second argument may be "first" or "words". If it is "first" only the string's first character will be converted. If it is set to "words", every word's first character will be converted.

Example:

{{ lowercase("Foo Bar") }}          <!-- Returns "foo bar" -->
{{ lowercase("Foo Bar", "first") }} <!-- Returns "foo Bar" -->
{{ lowercase("Foo BAR", "words") }} <!-- Returns "foo bAR" -->

notempty

mixed notempty(mixed value[, mixed true[, mixed false]])

Checks if the first argument is not empty. Returns TRUE or FALSE if the optional arguments aren't specified. If they are specified it returns the second argument if TRUE and the third argument if FALSE.

Example:

{{ notempty("") }}                       <!-- Returns false -->
{{ notempty("Foobar") }}                 <!-- Returns true -->
{{ notempty(6 > 2) }}                    <!-- Returns true -->
{{ notempty("", "Not empty", "Empty") }} <!-- Returns "Empty" -->

padding

string padding(mixed value, number padding[, string align])

Takes value and adds padding on left side if third argument isn't specified. Third argument is optional and may be "left" or "right" and specifies the padding alignment. Second argument specifies the padding width.

Example:

{{ padding("2.40", 6) }}         <!-- Returns "  2.40" -->
{{ padding("12.40", 6) }}        <!-- Returns " 12.40" -->
{{ padding("2.40", 6, "left") }} <!-- Returns "2.40  " -->
{{ padding("1220.40", 6) }}      <!-- Returns "1220.40" -->

precision

string precision(number value, number precision)

Returns string containing value with a fixed number of decimals.

Example:

{{ precision(5, 2) }}    <!-- Returns "5.00" -->
{{ precision(5.25, 1) }} <!-- Returns "5.2" -->
{{ precision(5.26, 1) }} <!-- Returns "5.3" -->
{{ precision(5.24, 1) }} <!-- Returns "5.2" -->

truncate

string truncate(string value, number length[, string appendage])

Returns the string truncated to specified length. If third argument is specified it will be appended to the returned string if it's truncated.

Example:

{{ truncate("Foobar", 3) }}       <!-- Returns "Foo" -->
{{ truncate("Foobar", 4, "..") }} <!-- Returns "Fo.." -->
{{ truncate("Foob", 4, "..") }}   <!-- Returns "Foob" -->

truncatew

string truncatew(mixed string, number width[, string font[, number size[, string appendage]]])

Returns the string truncated to specified width in pixels. Default font is verdana. Default size is 12 pixels. If appendage is set it will be appended when truncated.

Example:

{{ truncatew("Foobar", 60) }}                      <!-- Returns "Foobar" -->
{{ truncatew("Foobar", 30) }}                      <!-- Returns "Foo" -->
{{ truncatew("Foobar", 30, "comic", 10) }}         <!-- Returns "Foo" -->
{{ truncatew("Foobar", 30, "comic", 10, "...") }}  <!-- Returns "Fo..." -->

uc

Alias of uppercase()

uppercase

string uppercase(mixed value[, string options])

If only first argument is specified it converts all the characters to upper case. The second argument may be "first" or "words". If it is "first" only the string's first character will be converted. If it is set to "words", every word's first character will be converted.

Example:

{{ uppercase("Foo Bar") }}          <!-- Returns "FOO BAR" -->
{{ uppercase("foo bar", "first") }} <!-- Returns "Foo bar" -->
{{ uppercase("foo baR", "words") }} <!-- Returns "Foo BaR" -->
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