- Add Forge's "name" field to the loot tables. This doesn't resolve all
our missing loot providers, but it's a start.
- Add back GUIs for pocket computers, printouts, view computer, etc...
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
This only renders the bounding box on non-screen edges of the monitor,
meaning you have an uninterrupted view of the screen when hovering
hover.
Closes#219
Rendering an item worked in principle, but had several caveats:
- The terminal did not fit well within the item's texture, so we had a
rather large border.
- The "correctness" of this was very tied to Minecraft's item rendering
code. This changed a little in 1.13, causing problems like #208.
Instead we effectively reuse the computer GUI rendering code, though
also handling coloured pocket computers and rendering the modem light.
This fixes#208, and hopefully fixes#212.
If mod loading fails, we'll continue to load colour handlers. As
blocks/items have not been registered, then we'll throw an NPE.
See MinecraftForge/MinecraftForge#5682. Somewhat fixes#168.
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.
Are most of these changes small and petty? Yes. However, IMO they do
make the code more readable. Anyway, a summary of some of the more
interesting changes:
- Expose Abstract*Upgrade classes in the API
- Fix the spelling of Jonathan in the API docs (*shakes fist*)
- Fix bug with printout not working in the offhand.
- Rename any argments/variables accidentally named "m_*", and add an
inspection to prevent it happening again.
- Remove most of the Block*.Properties classes - just inline them in
the parent class.
- Return super.writeToNBT instead of reassigning at the top.
OK, so let's get this out of the way, there's some actual changes mixed
in here too. I'm really sorry:
- Turtles can now not be renamed with unnamed item tags (previously it
would clear the name, this seemed a little unideal).
- commands.getBlock(s)Data will also include NBT.
Now, onto the horror story which is these inspection changes:
- Make a lot of methods static
- Typo fixes
- Make utility classes final + private constructor
- Lots of reformatting (ifs -> ternary, invert control flow, etc...)
- ???
- Profit!
I'm so going to regret this - can pretty much guarantee this is going to
break something.
- Move container opening (and gui handling) into a separate class
- Move turtle/computer placement code onto the block
- GUIs now use gui{Left,Top} instead of calculating it manually.
- IPeripheralTile is now exposed in the API.
- We send special packets for key and mouse events, which are then
processed by the container's InputState.
- InputState keeps track of currently held keys and mouse buttons.
- When closing the container, we queue key_up/mouse_up events for any
pending buttons.
- Restrict what items can be inserted into printers. They're now closer
to brewing stands or furnaces: nothing can go in the output slot,
only ink in the ink slot, and only paper in the paper slot.
- Fix build.gradle using the wrong version
- Trim the width of tables to fit when displaying on the client. Closes
#45. Note, our solution isn't perfect, as it will wordwrap too, but
it's adaquate for now.
This is far more elegant than our weird method of baking things and
manually inserting them into the model map. Also means we no longer need
the whole turtle_dynamic thing.
It's rather embarassing that it's been restructured _again_, but I think
this is a nice middle-ground. The previous implementation was written
mostly for Fabric, which doesn't always map perfectly to Forge.
- Move the message identifier into the registration phrase. It's not
really a property of the message itself, rather a property of the
registry, so better suited there.
- Move message handling into the message itself. Honestly, it was just
ending up being rather messy mixing the logic in two places.
This also means we can drop some proxy methods, as it's easier to
have conditionally loaded methods.
- Move network registry into a dedicated class, as that's what we're
doing for everything else.
This means we can avoid several rather ugly instances of getItemBlock
and a cast. We also derive the ItemBlock's registered name from the
block's name, which makes the register a little less ugly.
- Move the "world directory" getter out of the proxy - we can just use
Forge's code here.
- Remove the server proxies, as both were empty. We don't tend to
register any dedicated-server specific code, so I think we can leave
them out.
- All "named" entries (blocks, items, recipes, TEs and pocket/turtle
upgrades) are registeredin one place.
- Most client side models/textures are registered in ClientRegistry -
we can't do item colours or TEs for now, as these aren't event based.
- A little cleanup to how we handle ItemPocketComputer models.
This offers several advantages
- Less registration code: the subscribers are reigstered automatically,
and we don't need to worry about sided-proxies.
- We no longer have so many .instance() calls.
- Move configuration loading into a separate file, just so it doesn't
clutter up ComputerCraft.java.
- Normalise property names, so they're all snake_case.
- Split properties into separate categories (http, turtle, peripheral),
so the main one is less cluttered.
- Define an explicit ordering of each category.
- Remove redundant constructors and super calls
- Standardise naming of texture fields
- Always use postfix notations for loops
- Cleanup several peripheral classes
Previously we would send computer state (labels, id, on/off) through the
ClientComputer rather than as part of the TE description. While this
mostly worked fine, it did end up making things more complex than they
needed to be.
We sync most data to the tile each tick, so there's little risk of
things getting out of date.
Some methods act the same on both sides, and so can be in utility
classes. Others are only needed on one side, and so do not really need
to be part of the proxy.
- Remove TurtleVisionCamera. It would be possible to add this back in
the future, but for now it is unused and so should be removed.
- Move frame info (cursor blink, current render frame) into a
FrameInfo class.
- Move record methods (name, playing a record) into a RecordUtil class.
- getPickBlock is now implemented directly on computers and turtles,
rather than on the tile.
- Bounding boxes are handled on the block rather than tile. This ends
up being a little ugly in the case of BlockPeripheral, but it's not
the end of the world.
- Explosion resistance is only implemented for turtles now.
This ends up being slightly cleaner as we can rely on Minecraft's own
model dependency system. Also reduces reliance on Forge's APIs, which
_potentially_ makes porting a little easier.
As CCEdu has not been updated, and is unlikely to be updated as Dan does
not have the rights to open source it, we're removing explicit support
for now.
If an alternative arises in the future, it would be good to support, but
in a way which requires less workarounds in CC's core.