Difference between revisions of "HPL3/Modding/Mod Dependencies"
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==When to Use Mod Dependencies== | ==When to Use Mod Dependencies== | ||
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*The main occasion to use Mod Dependencies is when you want to distribute assets packs which include models, textures, materials, scripts, etc for people to use freely in their own mods. | *The main occasion to use Mod Dependencies is when you want to distribute assets packs which include models, textures, materials, scripts, etc for people to use freely in their own mods. | ||
− | *Mod dependencies can help to reduce the mod size you want to distribute, as a big portion of the assets themselves are not actually included in the mod, but come from an external source.{{clr}} | + | *Mod dependencies can help to reduce the mod size you want to distribute, as a big portion of the assets themselves are not actually included in the mod, but come from an external source. |
+ | [[File:Mod-dependencies-diagarm.png|thumb|A simple diagram showing the process of a mod dependency. Several mods take resources from one source. Both mods use the castle assets pack.|500x500px|alt=|left]]{{clr}} | ||
{{Note|The level editor will be able to pick on mod dependencies and will load the assets if there are any.}} | {{Note|The level editor will be able to pick on mod dependencies and will load the assets if there are any.}} | ||
Revision as of 22:47, 26 August 2020
Mod dependencies provide a solution for sharing mod contents across multiple other mods. A few mods could depend on a parent mod to derive assets and other content from, instead of including it in their own mod.
Contents
When to Use Mod Dependencies
- The main occasion to use Mod Dependencies is when you want to distribute assets packs which include models, textures, materials, scripts, etc for people to use freely in their own mods.
- Mod dependencies can help to reduce the mod size you want to distribute, as a big portion of the assets themselves are not actually included in the mod, but come from an external source.
Setting Up a Mod Dependency
In order to turn a regular mod into a mod dependency, the mod's entry file needs to have a special attribute called UID
. This is used so other mods can reference your mod as a dependency. The convention of naming a UID is the form provider_name.mod_name
. For example, if the mod creator is named steve
and the mod name is called Castle Assets Pack
, the UID
for the mod will be steve.castle_assets_pack
.
In order to set a UID
manually for a mod:
- Open the mod's entry entry file.
- Inside, add an attribute called
UID
and give it a name:<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <Content Version="1.0" Type="StandAlone" Title="Your mod name here" Author="Your name here" Description="Mod description here" UID="my_uid" LauncherPic="LauncherPic.png" InitCfg="config/main_init.cfg" />
Now you can use the mod as a dependency for other mods.
Using a Mod Dependency
In order to use a mod dependency, the entry file of the mod which uses the dependency needs to have a special attribute called Dependencies
. It is a list of UIDs
separated by commas.
In order to set Dependencies
manually for a mod:
- Open the entry entry file of the mod you want to add a dependency to.
- Inside, add an attribute called
Dependencies
and list theUID
(s):<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <Content Version="1.0" Type="StandAlone" Title="Your mod name here" Author="Your name here" Description="Mod description here" Dependencies="my_uid" LauncherPic="LauncherPic.png" InitCfg="config/main_init.cfg" />
Now your mod loads the mod dependency with the UID
of "my_uid
".