- The following events have been added:
- PlayerToggleGlideEvent
- PlayerToggleSwimEvent
- The following API methods have been added:
- Entity->getSize()
- Living->isSwimming()
- Living->setSwimming()
- Living->isGliding()
- Living->setSwimming()
- Player->toggleSwim()
- Player->toggleGlide()
we can't have landed on it unless it actually has a collision box - otherwise, we only landed _in_ it.
This assumes, of course, that no blocks have bounding boxes >= 2 blocks tall, which currently none do.
this will break non-standard use cases with large forces, but they only have to stick a 'null' at the end of the parameter list.
Since this function should be primarily used for vanilla knockback, it makes more sense to keep the default as vanilla, but allow people to change it if they want to.
closes#4106 (this is close to #4106 anyway, but small enough that it was easier to recreate it than pull and modify it)
closes#2707
The motivation for this is to prevent passing a dynamic argument to cancellation, which in almost all cases is a bug in user code. This same mistake also appears in a few places in the PM core (as seen in this commit), but in those cases the mistakes were mostly harmless since they were taking place before the event was actually called.
closes#3836
in pretty much every case, these usages really wanted to read the tag's contents anyway, which can be combined with a getTag() and instanceof call for more concise and static analysis friendly code.
In the few cases where the tag contents wasn't needed, it still wanted to check the type, which, again, can be done in a more static analysis friendly way by just using getTag() and instanceof.
I wonder if there's a way to generalise item consuming beyond just eating/drinking. Stuff like lava bucket in a furnace needs the same kind of "leftover" logic.
this reduces the temptation to use it in high-level code, as well as making syncNetworkData() more useful (now it can export to many data collections, which means we can start to think about having a property cache per network session, which is more flexible)