I just made a simple like cliennt side that does stuff
looking for ideas to add
you can get it herre
modrinth.com/mod/swift
looking for ideas to add
you can get it herre
modrinth.com/mod/swift
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for teh clac function:
nether to overworld coordinates (and the reverse) are always good
also a conversion between "blocks" and "chunks & blocks" would be useful (e.g. +65 blocks is block 0 in chunk 5)
[this is simple with a calculator, but no everyone plays with one ready to hand]
nether to overworld coordinates (and the reverse) are always good
also a conversion between "blocks" and "chunks & blocks" would be useful (e.g. +65 blocks is block 0 in chunk 5)
[this is simple with a calculator, but no everyone plays with one ready to hand]
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Can you explain more please?
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You've indicated you want to include a /calc command: within this it might be useful to have a
/calc nether-coord that provides the coordinates of the corresponding block in the nether (only works in overworld)
/calc overworld-coord that provides the coordinates of the corresponding block in the overworld (only works in nether)
these would be useful for linking portals. [These calculatores exist (quite a few of them), so the advantage would be having the aclculator available inside MC.]
Similarly
/calc c&b #### (where #### in some integer) woudl return the block and chunk format (converting +65 to chunk 4 block 0 _or_ -65 to chunk -4 block 15 for examples)
[As to why this migh be useful, see the mistake in my original post where I counted chunks 1,2,3,4 instead of 0,1,,2,3 …]
as well as the rreverse
/calc num chunk 4 block 4 returns +69
/calc nether-coord that provides the coordinates of the corresponding block in the nether (only works in overworld)
/calc overworld-coord that provides the coordinates of the corresponding block in the overworld (only works in nether)
these would be useful for linking portals. [These calculatores exist (quite a few of them), so the advantage would be having the aclculator available inside MC.]
Similarly
/calc c&b #### (where #### in some integer) woudl return the block and chunk format (converting +65 to chunk 4 block 0 _or_ -65 to chunk -4 block 15 for examples)
[As to why this migh be useful, see the mistake in my original post where I counted chunks 1,2,3,4 instead of 0,1,,2,3 …]
as well as the rreverse
/calc num chunk 4 block 4 returns +69
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how come people never say what it is in he post? XD
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Please leave any suggestionns here!