I've been putting this off for a while, as I had issues in the past with
people using old Node versions (e.g. #1806), but it no long works on my
machine, so time to make the switch.
Also do a bit of a package update. Hit a rollup bug while doing this
(https://github.com/rollup/plugins/issues/1877), so holding that update
back for now.
The main thing of note is Spotless, which also bumps the version of
Ktlint. I've been putting this off for a while[^1], as this changed a
bunch of formatting, and Spotless's (broken) caching was making it hard
to test. Ended up downloading ktlint and running it localy.
[^1]: 8204944b5fdf2ec29ff7dcb112dc454b7710d981
These just return details about the currently equipped *item*. This
allows us to expose information about the currently equipped upgrade,
without having to invent a whole new format.
Docs are a bit consise, but didn't really know how to flesh them out any
further.
Fixes#964, fixes#1613, closes#1692.
Now, hear me out, what if instead of having three @Nullable annotations,
we had *four*?
I've been wanting to switch away from javax.annoations for a while. The
library has been deprecated for ever and, unlike other @Nullable
annotations, the annotation is attached to the parameter/function
itself, rather than the type.
We use JSpecify rather than one of the alternatives (JetBrains,
CheckerFramework) mostly because it's what NullAway recommends. We keep
CheckerFramework around for @DefaultQualifier, and JB's for @Contract.
There are some ugly changes here — for instance, `@Nullable byte[]` is
replace by `byte @Nullable`, and `@Nullable ILuaMachine.Factory` is
`ILuaMachine.@Nullable Factory`. Ughr, I understand why, but it does not
spark joy :).
I removed this in fc834cd97fe941a192e40962ac3bb27be102ce09, way back in
late 2024. Looks like it's been updating in the meantime and I hadn't
noticed, so add it back.
I've simplified the code a little bit, to make use of our NeoForge's new
capability system, but otherwise it's almost exactly the same :D.
As part of this, we also rewrite some of the turtle placing code, and
how it uses the turtle_can_use tag:
Minecraft 1.21 cleaned up the item/block clicking code a little bit,
splitting Block.use into Block.useItemOn and Block.useWithoutItem. The
first of these is pretty much exactly what we wanted in the first place,
so the tag was kinda redundant and we commented it out in the 1.21
update.
This was never meant to be a long-term fix, but time has gone by anyway.
We now check that tag, and call useWithoutItem() if present —
effectively restoring the previous behaviour.
Fixes#2011
Okay, listen. I started writing a few more gametests (see #1682), and
then thought I'd do a cheeky Gradle update. However, that broke
vanilla-extract[^1], and also triggered a load of deprecation warnings,
and at that point it was too late to separate the too.
[^1]: 8975ed5a7b
I've no motivation for modding right now, but always got time for build
system busywork!
CC:T (and CC before that) has always published its API docs. However,
they're not always the most helpful — they're useful if you know what
you're looking for, but aren't a good getting-started guide.
Part of the issue here is there's no examples, and everything is
described pretty abstractly. I have occasionally tried to improve this
(e.g. the peripheral docs in bdffabc08e2eb9895f966c949acc8334a2bf4475),
but it's a long road.
This commit adds a new example mod, which registers peripherals, an API
and a turtle upgrade. While the mod itself isn't exported as part of the
docs, we reference blocks of it using Java's new {@snippet} tag.
- Switch the Forge project to use NeoForge's new Legacy MDG plugin. We
don't *need* to do this, but it means the build logic for Forge and
NeoForge is more closely aligned.
- Add a new SnippetTaglet, which is a partial backport of Java 18+'s
{@snippet}.
- Add an example mod. This is a working multi-loader mod, complete with
datagen (albeit with no good multi-loader abstractions).
- Move our existing <pre>{@code ...}</pre> blocks into the example mod,
replacing them with {@snippet}s.
- Add a new overview page to the docs, providing some getting-started
information. We had this already in the dan200.computercraft.api
package docs, but it's not especially visible there.
Been dragging my feet over this for a while now, but increasingly
uncomfortable with Overwolf. I'm not going to delete the project (or any
existing versions), just not publish any new versions there.
- Move redstone methods out of the IAPIEnvironment, and into a new
RedstoneAccess. We similarly move the implementation from Environment
into a new RedstoneState class.
The interface is possibly a little redundant (interfaces with a
single implementation are always a little suspect), but it's nice to
keep the consumer/producer interfaces separate.
- Abstract most redstone API methods into a separate shared class, that
can be used by both the rs API and the new redstone relay.
- Add the new redstone relay block.
The docs are probably a little lacking here, but I really struggled to
write anything which wasn't just "look, it's the same as the redstone
API".
Iris now has built-in support for NeoForge, so we can use the same
integration on both.
We also re-enable Forge's client tests, and test Iris there too.
Fixes#1967
Under Forge, netty-codec lives on the BOOT layer. However, this means it
does not have access to our jzlib (which lives on the GAME layer). To
fix this, we now shadow netty-codec (and its dependents, like netty-http
and netty-proxy) rather than jar-in-jaring them.
This involves some horrible build logic, but means websocket compression
works on Forge.
Fixes#1958.
- Update to latest NeoForge, fixing issues with config API changes.
Closes#1903.
- Update to latest Fabric, switching to the ender pearl conventional
tag, and new loot API.
In c8eadf401190db2b9c3145f768063097b9c345bd we marked our various modems
as "brittle", which ensures they do not pop-off computers when the whole
structure moves.
However, this still requires the modem to be glued — if the modem is
outside the superglue range, it will still pop off. We can fix it by
registering a special "attached check" for the various modem blocks,
which says that the modem should be moved when the adjacent block does.
Fixes#1913
- Rename ToolActions to ItemAbilities. Closes#1881.
- Remove our source set helper, as NG has built-in support for this
now.
- Remove our code to generate new JavaExec tasks from runs, as NG now
generates JavaExec tasks normally.
Build system:
- Switch to our new maven server. This has a cleaner separation between
published packages and mirrored packages, to avoid leaking those into
other people's builds.
- Update Gradle and Loom versions.
Code:
- Link to definitions instead in the breaking changes page.
- Fix several unused variable warnings.
Other:
- Remove unsupported Minecraft versions from the issue template.
API Changes:
- Minecraft had updated ModelResourceLocation to no longer inherit from
ResourceLocation.
To allow referencing both already baked models
(ModelResourceLocation) and loading new models (via ResourceLocation)
in turtle model loadders, we add a new "ModelLocation" class, that
acts as a union between the two.
I'm not entirely convinced by the design here, so might end up
changing again before a stable release.o
- Merge IMedia.getAudioTitle and IMedia.getAudio into a single
IMedia.getAudio method, which now returns a JukeboxSong rather than a
SoundEvent.
Other update notes:
- Minecraft had rewritten how buffers are managed again. This is a
fairly minor change for us (vertex -> addVertex, normal -> setNormal,
etc...), with the exception that you can no longer use
MultiBufferSource.immediate with the tesselator.
I've replaced this with GuiGraphics.bufferSource, which appears to be
fine, but worth keeping an eye on in case there's any odd render
state issues.
- Crafting now uses a CraftingInput (a list of items) rather than a
CraftingContainer, which allows us to simplify turtle crafting code.