See #354
- Remove Lua script to generate recipes/advancements for coloured
disks, turtle upgrades and pocket upgrades. Replacing them with Lua
ones.
- Generate most block drops via the data generator system. Aside from
cables, they all follow one of two templates.
Unfortunately we can't apply the config changes due to backwards
compatibility. This'll be something we may need to PR into Forge.
CraftTweaker support still needs to be added.
This provides the following methods:
- dan200.computercraft.turtle.removeUpgrade(id: String)
- dan200.computercraft.turtle.removeUpgrade(stack: IItemStack)
- dan200.computercraft.turtle.addTool(id: String, craftItem: IItemStack[, toolItem: IItemStack][, kind: string])
While it's pretty minimal, it should allow for a reasonable amount of
functionality.
Closes#327 and #97.
Mostly just rearranging. Bump JUnit version in an attempt to fix test
outputs, but it appears this is a mix of gradle/gradle#5975 and
gradle/gradle#4438.
So very little works, but it compiles and runs.
Things to resolve over the next few days:
- Horrible mappings (should largely be resolved by tomorrow).
- Cannot send extra data over containers - we'll have to see what Forge
does here.
- Turtle models are broken
- No block drops yet - this will largely be cherry-picking whatever I
did on Fabric.
- Weird inventory desyncs (items don't show up initially when
interacting with a CC inventory).
- Probably lots of other things.
- Adds a CheckStyle configuration which is pretty similar to CC's
existing one.
- Add the Gradle license plugin.
- Ensure the existing source code is compatible with these additional
checks.
See #239
Look, I originally had this split into several commits, but lots of
other cleanups got mixed in. I then backported some of the cleanups to
1.12, did other tidy ups there, and eventually the web of merges was
unreadable.
Yes, this is a horrible mess, but it's still nicer than it was. Anyway,
changes:
- Flatten everything. For instance, there are now three instances of
BlockComputer, two BlockTurtle, ItemPocketComputer. There's also no
more BlockPeripheral (thank heavens) - there's separate block classes
for each peripheral type.
- Remove pretty much all legacy code. As we're breaking world
compatibility anyway, we can remove all the code to load worlds from
1.4 days.
- The command system is largely rewriten to take advantage of 1.13's
new system. It's very fancy!
- WidgetTerminal now uses Minecraft's "GUI listener" system.
- BREAKING CHANGE: All the codes in keys.lua are different, due to the
move to LWJGL 3. Hopefully this won't have too much of an impact.
I don't want to map to the old key codes on the Java side, as there
always ends up being small but slight inconsistencies. IMO it's
better to make a clean break - people should be using keys rather
than hard coding the constants anyway.
- commands.list now allows fetching sub-commands. The ROM has already
been updated to allow fancy usage such as commands.time.set("noon").
- Turtles, modems and cables can be waterlogged.
- Some performance improvements to JEI recipe resolver
- Use a shared map for upgrade items, meaning we only need one map
lookup.
- Cache the basic upgrade recipes.
- Use the MC version within project rather than version name.
- Turtle and pocket computers provide a "creator mod id" based on their
upgrade(s).
We track which mod was active when the upgrade was registered, and
use that to determine the owner. Technically we could use the
RegistryLocation ID, but this is not always correct (such as
Plethora's vanilla modules).
- We show all upgraded turtles/pocket computers in JEI now, rather than
just CC ones.
- We provide a custom IRecipeRegistryPlugin for upgrades, which
provides custom usage/recipes for any upgrade or upgraded item. We
also hide our generated turtle/pocket computer recipes in order to
prevent duplicates.
This allows wireless modems (advanced and normal) to be used in
multiparts. There's a very limited set of uses for this (mostly allows
using Chisel and Bits with them), but it's very simple to do.
I'd like to look into MCMP support for wired modems/cables in the
future, but this will be somewhat harder due to their pre-existing
multiblock structure.
Similarly, might be fun to look into CBMP compatibility.