This release fixes a bug where the location of chunks was calculated incorrectly
Details
- Fixed a bug where the location of a chunk was calculated incorrectly.
- Fixed a bug where the field changer was loading mca files even when it was clear it didn't have to.
- Added a Gradle function to print the current Gradle- and Java version.
"Requirements":
- Either:
- JRE 8+, you can get it from HERE
- A Minecraft Java Edition installation
- A computer
- A brain
If you have Java from Oracle installed on your system
Most likely, .jar
files are associated with java on your computer, it should therefore launch by simply double clicking the file (or however your OS is configured to open files using your mouse or keyboard). If not, you can try java -jar mcaselector-1.9.7.jar
from your console. If this doesn't work, you might want to look into how to modify the PATH
variable on your system to tell your system that java is an executable program.
If you have Minecraft Java Edition installed on your system
Minecraft Java Edition comes with a JRE that you can use to start the MCA Selector, so there is no need to install another version of java on your system. On Windows, that java version is usually located in C:\Program Files (x86)\Minecraft\runtime\jre-x64\bin\
and once inside this folder you can simply run java.exe -jar <path-to-mcaselector-1.9.7.jar>
. On Mac OS you should find it in ~/Library/Application\ Support/minecraft/runtime/jre-x64/jre.bundle/Contents/Home/bin/
where you can execute ./java -jar <path-to-mcaselector-1.9.7.jar>
.
WARNING: For macOS 10.14+ (Mojave) It is NOT recommended to use the JRE provided by Minecraft (1.8.0_74), because it contains a severe bug that causes JavaFX applications to crash when they lose focus while a dialog window (such as the save-file-dialog) is open (see the bug report here). This bug has been fixed in Java 1.8.0_201 and above.
If you are using OpenJDK
If you are using a distribution of OpenJDK, you have to make sure that it comes with JavaFX, as it is needed to run the MCA Selector. Some distributions like AdoptOpenJDK (shipped with most Linux distributions) do not ship with JavaFX by default. On Debian distributions, an open version of JavaFX is contained in the openjfx
package. This or some other installation of JavaFX is required to run the .jar
.
If none of these instructions work, apply "A brain" that you providently held ready after having read the "Requirements" section carefully.