Do we still use "username#3333" format since regular usernames are a thing now?
Details
Do we still use "username#3333" format since regular usernames are a thing now?
When I tried scraping all messages in a server by a user, I did the "username#3333" format, even though they had a username now. It took a while after I started the program but when it finally finished, it didn't even find any messages to scrape for some reason. So, I tried just using the username they use without the "#3333" part and it did work, however, it also scraped a ton of user profile photos for whatever reason.
Checklist
[X] I have looked through existing issues to make sure that this bug has not been reported before
[X] I have provided a descriptive title for this issue
[X] I have made sure that that this bug is reproducible on the latest version of the application
[X] I have provided all the information needed to reproduce this bug as efficiently as possible
Version
Latest
Flavor
GUI (Graphical User Interface)
Platform
Windows 10
Export format
No response
Steps to reproduce
Do we still use "username#3333" format since regular usernames are a thing now?
Details
Do we still use "username#3333" format since regular usernames are a thing now?
When I tried scraping all messages in a server by a user, I did the "username#3333" format, even though they had a username now. It took a while after I started the program but when it finally finished, it didn't even find any messages to scrape for some reason. So, I tried just using the username they use without the "#3333" part and it did work, however, it also scraped a ton of user profile photos for whatever reason.
Checklist