Yes, I understand this. I have linux in my VMWare. I'm wondering what to do with these .dll's
Then where do I put the .dll's?
Hold on, I don't understand you. Currently I am using Windows. I have .dll files to use. Just tell me what directory I put them so that OperServ can load them.
All 3 of those, especially when combined and taking into consideration that you were told 3 times .dll's are windows only and .so's are linux only, warrant being accused of laziness.. I'd even say you didn't even bother to properly read the answer even though it was only one post up every single time.
Then again, a lot of the people asking for support here, and especially on IRC are lazy and skipped the documentation step.. the difference being most don't pretend to have read it.
If I'm lazy, how come I'm a C Programmer and worked a TON on this: http://powdertoy.co.uk/
programmers are especially lazy, I being one have no problem admitting that..
For all I care you could be writing windows 8 on your own overnight, if you don't read the docs I write for me 200 line app, I will still call you lazy
That said, I would be much more concerned with the fact that you claim to be a C programmer yet do not seem to realize a very basic difference between compiling C code for *nix and windows: the first generally using .so's and the second .dll's...
As for a guide to write modules, there is a wee bit of documentation regarding using the anope API on the wiki (
http://wiki.anope.org/index.php/Tutorials ) though that just covers the very basics. For more detailed stuff there s the doxy (
http://anope.org/doxy/ ) but the best way to get familiar with the API is probably looking at the existing modules, both core and 3rd party.. it s all pretty straightforward.