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<syntaxhighlight lang="lua"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="lua"> | ||
outputChatBox("This is your status:",player) | local showHealth = true | ||
if | |||
local health = | outputChatBox("This is your status:", player) | ||
outputChatBox("Health: "..health, player) | if showHealth == true then | ||
local health = getElementHealth(player) | |||
outputChatBox("Health: "..tostring(health), player) | |||
end | end | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> |
Latest revision as of 21:29, 12 May 2009
A local variable only exists within the scope it is declared. The scope is the 'level' the variable is visible for the script, containing the value that was assigned to it.
Usage
You should use local variables anytime it is possible, when you don't need to access them globally. This saves you from having troubles with duplicate variable names. Plus, access to local variables is faster.
It is thus also good practice to declare as local any variables that are to exist in any scope within a script file, by declaring it using local outside any blocks. The main reason to make a variable global in a resource is when it must be accessed by more than one script file in the resource. Since all script files within a resource share the same global environment, it makes sense to use a global variable here.
Examples
function showMoney(source) local playermoney = getPlayerMoney ( source ) outputChatBox(playermoney) end
The playermoney variable only exists within the 'showMoney' function.
local showHealth = true outputChatBox("This is your status:", player) if showHealth == true then local health = getElementHealth(player) outputChatBox("Health: "..tostring(health), player) end
The health variable only exists within the if-condition block, that is between the 'then' and the 'end'.