Squirrel
Squirrel Version | Release Date[1] | Games |
---|---|---|
2.2.3 | 2009-06-30 | Portal 2 Alien Swarm Counter-Strike: Global Offensive |
3.0.4 | before 2014-03-22 | Left 4 Dead 2 |
3.2 | 2022-02-10 | Team Fortress 2 |
Squirrel is a programming language similar to Lua, but uses a C like syntax. In Source, Squirrel is used as one of the scripting languages in the VScript scripting system. The official Squirrel documentation can be found here.
in
operator should be at the <, <=, >, >=
level.Squirrel heavily uses an associative array data structure called a table. Both the keys and values of a table can contain almost any kind of variable type. The scripting environment consists of nested tables, and when a script is executed its variables and functions are added as table slots.
printl("Hello World"); // statements can end with both a semicolon...
printl("Hello World") // ...or a newline character
Squirrel's syntax is similar to C/C++/Java etc... but the language has a more dynamic nature like Python/Lua etc.
Statements can be separated with both a new line or ;
(or with the keywords case
or default
if inside a switch/case statement), both symbols are not required if the statement is followed by }
.
Contents
File format
Variables
Squirrel has mainly two kinds of variables: table slots and local
variables.
This doesn't have to do with types; Like in Python, any variable can be of any data type at any time and there are no type declarations.
Since the execution scope is always a table, any variables declared outside functions will always be table slots.
- Table slots have to be declared using the
<-
operator. These are to be used for values that should persist when a function ends. Once a slot exists, it can be reassigned with both the=
or the<-
operator. The former will throw an exception if the slot does not exist and should be preferred if a reassignment is expected (and not a slot creation). - Local variables can be declared using the
local
keyword. Each of these is only accessible in the scope it was defined in, namely its surrounding curly brackets. They are to be used temporarily or as helpers that can be discarded later on. A typical example is afor
loop with an index variable:for (local i = 0; i < 20; i++) {...}
. - Global variables are simply table slots in the root table (
getroottable()
). They can be declared using the::
scoping operator and accessed with or without it. - Constants are declared with the
const
keyword and are intended for values that will never change at runtime, such as Pi or a string representing a file path. Since constants are a compile-time feature, their value is computed compile-time and thus can only be an integer, float or string. Attempting to assign a new value to a constant yields a compile-time error"can't assign expression"
; It can be imagined that Squirrel replaces each occurrence of the constant's identifier in the code with its current value, hence the error message. Current, because the same constant can be defined multiple times in code but with different values (with theconst
keyword). During runtime,getconsttable()
returns a table with all constants that have been found during compiling; If more code is compiled, that very table is used to resolve constants. The constants table and its values behave normally and don't have any protection that constants usually have.
- Note:
local
andconst
variables are declared with the=
operator. Using<-
for those yields a compile time error.
a <- 5 // creates a table slot in this table
b <- "A text string" // creates a table slot in this table
::x <- 10 // creates a table slot in the root table
local i = 0 // initializes a temporary variable
const E = 2.71828 // creates a new constant
b = "New string" // modifies the existing table slot
x = 11 // modifies the existing table slot
|
The in
operator can be used to test whether a table slot exists. One could also do: try {a} catch (e) { /*...*/ }
. The following code is assumed to be executed after the above, i.e. in the same environment.
"a" in this // true
"x" in this // false, unless we're in the root table
"i" in this // false, local variables aren't table slots
"E" in this // false, unless we're in the constants table
delete a // deletes a table slot
"a" in this // false, no longer exists
|
Data Types
Squirrel is a dynamically typed language. Any variable can be assigned a value of any type.
The built-in function typeof
returns the type of an input value as a string in lower case, e.g. typeof(5) == "integer"
.
Type | Description |
---|---|
Integer
|
The integers -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647 , namely -231 to 231-1.
Note:In 64-bit games such as Team Fortress 2, integers are also 64-bit sized which means they represent -9,223,372,036,854,775,808 to 9,223,372,036,854,775,807.
|
Float
|
-3.4028235e38 to 3.4028235e38 , namely -3.4028235 × 1038 to 3.4028235 × 1038.In code, a number becomes a float by adding a decimal point. The notations |
String
|
An immutable string. They behave like C strings, and support escape sequences (\t,\a,\b,\n,\r,\v,\f,\\,\",\',\0,\xhhhh ). These sequences will not work when used in a verbatim string literal.
|
Null
|
Null data type with the only value null .
|
Bool
|
Boolean data type that can be true or false .
|
Table
|
Associative array. |
Array
|
Mutable C style array. |
Function
|
Second order functions are supported, so functions can be assigned as values to variables. |
Class
|
Object oriented class. Implementation similar to tables. |
Class Instance
|
Object instances of classes. Script handles generated by the game also identify as instances. |
Generator
|
A function whose execution can be suspended and resumed. |
Userdata
|
Opaque data used by the game. |
Thread
|
A coroutine instance, works similarly to a generator but has it's own execution stack. |
Weak reference
|
A weak reference will be set to null when the object that the reference is pointing at gets destroyed.
|
Bool
Squirrel considers null
, 0
(type Integer) and 0.0
(type Float) as false
, any other value is considered true
. This allows you for example to null-check variables using if (var)
.
find(<substring>)
which returns either the index where it found the given substring or null. Do if (var == null)
instead.if (false) { /* ... */ } // not executed
if (null) { /* ... */ } // not executed
if (0) { /* ... */ } // not executed
if (0.0) { /* ... */ } // not executed
|
Tables
Tables are associative arrays, meaning that they contain a collection of key-value pairs, called slots. A table can be indexed into using the key, returning the associated value. The keys and values can be of any data type (except null
for the key), including other tables, allowing the creation of more complex data structures.
Tables are defined using curly brackets. Inside a table definition slots can be defined using the key1 = value1, key2 = value2, ...
pattern. Outside of the definition, new slots can be added to existing tables using the table.key <- value
pattern.
Using the .
operator to index a key only works when the key is a string or numerical literal. Array style indexing table[keyVariable]
can be used to index any kind of key.
len(), clear()
.// Table definition. Commas between key-value pairs are
// optional if whitespace is present. However, they are
// required if the next key is inside square brackets.
myTable <-
{
a = 3 // key: "a", value: 3
b = 7, // key: "b", value: 7
[6] = "six" // key: 6 , value: "six"
func = function() // key: "func"
{
return a + b
}
nestedTable = // key: "nestedTable"
{
z = "a string"
}
}
// alternatively:
myTable <- {}
myTable["a"] <- 3 // string keys can be indexed...
myTable.b <- 7 // ...in two ways
myTable[6] <- "six" // numbers must be indexed like this
myTable.func <- function() { return a + b }
myTable.nestedTable <- { z = "a string" }
|
// Iterating through a table:
// 'key' and 'value' are arbitrary
foreach (key, value in myTable)
{
printl(key + ": " + value)
}
// Prints (order might vary!):
// a: 3
// func: (function : 0x00000000005AD280)
// b: 4
// 6: six
// nestedTable: (table : 0x000000000069D130)
// The 'in' operator checks for keys, not values:
printl("a" in myTable) // prints "true"
printl( 3 in myTable) // prints "false"
printl(myTable.func()) // prints 10 (a+b)
// Every table has a built-in length function:
printl(myTable.len()) // prints 5
delete myTable.a // removes the pair a=3
|
Arrays
Arrays are sequences of objects that are numerically indexed starting from 0. Syntactically they function similarly to C arrays, but unlike C arrays, they are mutable and values can be inserted and removed using a set of built in functions.
Arrays are defined using square brackets.
in
operator to test whether some value is in the array because for Squirrel, arrays are tables where the keys are the indices. The in
operator would look through the indices that the array has and not its values.len(), clear(), append(<value>), insert(<index>, <value>), remove(<index>), reverse(), sort([func(a,b)])
.In Squirrel 3.x, more functions are available, including
find(<value>), map(<func(a)>) slice(<start>,[end])
.// Array definition. Commas between values
// are optional if whitespace is present.
myArray <-
[
7, // key: 0, value: 7
"text", // key: 1, value: "text"
null // key: 2, value: null
]
// alternatively:
myArray = [4, "text", null]
// alternatively:
myArray <- []
myArray.append(7)
myArray.append("text")
myArray.append(null)
// alternatively:
myArray <- array(3)
myArray[0] = 7
myArray[1] = "text"
myArray[2] = null
|
// Iterating through an array:
// 'i' and 'value' are arbitrary
foreach (i, value in myArray)
{
printl(i + ": " + value)
}
// alternatively:
for (local i = 0; i < myArray.len(); i++)
{
printl(i + ": " + myArray[i])
}
// Prints:
// 0: 7
// 1: more text
// 2: null
// The 'in' operator checks indices, not values:
printl( 2 in myArray) // prints "true"
printl("text" in myArray) // prints "false"
printl(myArray.len()) // prints 3
myArray.remove(0) // removes the element at index 0
// and rearranges all other indices
|
Functions
Functions in Squirrel work similarly to their C counterparts. Second order functions are supported, so functions can be directly manipulated like other values, including it being possible to store them in variables and table slots. Default parameter values and variable numbers of parameters are also supported.
For more details, see the Squirrel API about functions.
It is common practice to begin with a capital letter when naming functions.
// Function definition. Note that functions
// are just like variables that consist of
// a name and a value where the value
// contains the key word 'function'.
Greet <- function()
{
printl("Hello!")
}
someTable <-
{
Greet = function()
{
printl("Hello!")
}
}
// Functions can be local:
local GreetLocal = function()
{
printl("Hello!")
}
// Call these functions using "()".
// All of these print "Hello!":
Greet()
someTable.Greet()
GreetLocal()
|
// There is also a second syntax for convenience.
// All of this is equivalent to the code on the
// left. By the way, the brackets '{' and '}'
// are optional if there is just one statement.
function Greet()
{
printl("Hello!")
}
someTable <-
{
function Greet()
{
printl("Hello!")
}
}
local function GreetLocal()
{
printl("Hello!")
}
// Shorter: local function GreetLocal() printl("Hello!")
// All of these print "Hello!":
Greet()
someTable.Greet()
GreetLocal()
|
When a function is called, it can be made so that it can or must receive input values that determine the function's side effects and/or its return value.
- Multiple parameters must be comma delimited in the function definition:
function Test(a, b, c, d = 4, e = 5) {...}
For function calls, whitespace is sufficient instead of commas:Test(6,7,8) == Test(6 7 8)
- All parameters with no default value must be ordered first.
- To avoid exceptions, it is often a good idea to check if a parameter is not
null
. - As parameters are not restricted to a type, the
typeof
function can be used to handle different types differently.
// normal parameter
function Greet(name)
{
printl("Hello, " + name + "!")
}
Greet() // exception
Greet("Gabe") // prints "Hello, Gabe!"
|
// parameter with default value
function Greet(name = "Gordon")
{
printl("Hello, " + name + "!")
}
Greet() // prints "Hello, Gordon!"
Greet("Gabe") // prints "Hello, Gabe!"
|
A function can have a variable number of arguments by specifying "..."
as last parameter. In the function body, the variable vargv
will be available and behaves like a normal array.
vargv
is a pseudo-array that doesn't behave like a normal array. Every occurrence of it must be indexed with a number such as vargv[0]
. The length of it is stored in another variable named vargc
which however does not exist in Squirrel 3.x, making code incompatible.// Squirrel 3.x
varArgFunction <- function(delimiter, ...)
{
foreach (i, arg in vargv)
print(i + delimiter + arg + "\n")
}
varArgFunction(" : ", 4, null, "string")
// prints:
// 0 : 4
// 1 : null
// 2 : string
|
// Squirrel 2.x
varArgFunction <- function(delimiter, ...)
{
for (local i = 0, i < vargc; i++)
print(i + delimiter + vargv[i] + "\n")
}
varArgFunction(" : ", 4, null, "string")
// prints:
// 0 : 4
// 1 : null
// 2 : string
|
A function is ended with the optional return
statement, where it is also possible to return a value.
You can imagine a return value as being 'inserted' into where the function was called. If no return value is specified within the function, it returns the value as null
.
function IsEven(n)
{
if (n % 2 == 0)
return true
else
return false
}
// alternatively:
IsEven <- function(n) return n % 2 == 0
if (IsEven(42)) // (42 % 2 == 0) == true
{
printl("42 is even!")
}
|
Since Squirrel 3.x, there are lambda expressions which are used as a more convenient way to define a function that just returns a single expression. These are especially useful when a function is needed as a parameter for a different function such as array.sort
or array.map
.
local func = @(a,b) a - b // == function(a,b) { return a - b }
printl( func(17,9) ) // prints 8
local arr = [1,5,4,6,2,3]
arr.sort(func)
// arr == [1,2,3,4,5,6]
arr = arr.map( @(x) x * x ) // == function(x) { return x * x }
// arr == [1,4,9,16,25,36]
|
Generators
A generator is a function where the key word yield
appears; It suspends the execution of that generator function and can return some expression to the function that had resumed it. Some generator g
can be resumed with the expression resume g
; The value of this resume
expression is what was yield
ed when the function has been suspended the last time. The return
value of a generator does not matter.
Generators can be used in foreach
statements, such that no resume
statement must be typed. In this scenario, generators can be advantageous because they can calculate their next value just in time, whereas iterating over a precalculated array or table can be disadvantageous if the iteration ends before the end of that array or table is reached due to unnecessary calculations. Also, generators can yield a potentially infinite number of values whereas the number of values that arrays and tables can hold is finite.
function PowersOfTwo()
{
for (local n = 1; true; n *= 2)
yield n
}
local x = 100
// Set x to the smallest power of 2
// that is larger than or equal to x:
foreach (i,pow in PowersOfTwo())
{
if (pow >= x)
{
x = pow
break
}
}
Classes
The following is just an example of some basic class syntax. For details, see Squirrel API about classes.
_tostring(), _typeof(), _cmp(other), _add(other), _sub(other), _mul(other), _div(other), _modulo(other), _nexti(previdx)
.class Weapon
{
static prefix = "weapon_" // static variables are read-only!
// For instance-individual variables it's best to declare
// them with anything and overwrite them on construction.
name = null
primMax = null
secMax = null
// Containers and instances are not copied per instance, just
// the reference. count[0] is the same for all of instances.
count = [0]
constructor(name, prim, sec)
{
this.name = prefix + name
this.primMax = prim
this.secMax = sec
count[0]++
}
function GetEntities()
{
local list = []
local wep = null
while ( wep = Entities.FindByClassname(wep, name) )
{
list.append(wep)
}
return list
}
function _tostring() return this.name
// ... more useful functions ...
}
awp <- Weapon("awp", 10, 30)
ak47 <- Weapon("ak47", 30, 90)
// can access class variables and functions
// with awp.primMax, awp.GetEntities(), etc.
Files
With the Source VScript system, scripts are stored in the game\scripts\vscripts\
directory. Squirrel scripts use the .nut
file extension, and the .nuc
extension for ICE encrypted files.
Common to all Squirrel using games, scripts can be associated to a game entity as an entity script that is executed then the entity spawns, and has access to the script handle of its entity through the self
variable. Specific games can also have other methods of executing scripts.
Script files can also be executed from the Developer Console using the script_execute
command. Lines of code can even be executed in-line with the script
command.
See also
External links
- Squirrel (programming language)
- Squirrel Official Website
- Notepad++ syntax highlighting
- Squirrel Binary for Windows
References
References | ||
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