User:DavidJCobb

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Revision as of 02:05, 4 April 2017 by imported>DavidJCobb (→‎Scratchpad: mcm)
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Rotation library
A library for working with rotations in Skyrim. If you need to position and rotate one object relative to another, this'd be the code to do that.

Scratchpad

  • SkyUI MCM
    • OnInit calls both OnConfigInit and OnGameReload. If you need a task performed for both of those, put it in OnGameReload.
    • OnGameReload appears to run after OnVersionUpdate.
    • You can use HTML FONT tags in option text and sometimes in values. However, concatenated translations may break if wrapped in FONT tags. Fortunately, you can also put the FONT tags in the translation file itself.
  • Reacting to when an item is dropped
    • OnContainerChanged is reliable but can cause stack dumping when masses of items are removed.
    • OnInit is neither reliable nor safe. It fires twice: once when the item is first added to the player's inventory, and again while the item is being dropped. In the second case, OnInit may (and usually will) fire before the item is actually safe to work with, i.e. while it's becoming a safe ObjectReference. In essence, the item will be an ObjectReference script wrapping a null entity; it doesn't equal None and you can cast it to ObjectReference and Form, but you can't call methods on it.
    • OnLoad is safe but unreliable: when an item (whose base form has scripts) is dropped, Skyrim doesn't attach non-native scripts immediately, so your script may only be attached after the load event is fired. (OnContainerChanged is held until the script is attached; OnLoad is not.)
      • This delay doesn't seem to affect items spawned with PlaceAtMe. It seems to only affect items that the player has dropped.
    • OnItemRemoved can work, but due to the delay in attaching scripts, one must be careful. You won't be able to cast the akItemReference to the script that it should have until that script is attached. Thankfully, you can force Skyrim to attach the script immediately by performing certain (any?) concrete actions on the native ObjectReference, e.g. akItemReference.Disable() or even just akItemReference.MoveTo(akItemReference).
      • So given an item with MyItemScript attached to it, you'd try and cast akItemReference to a MyItemScript. If this fails, you'd do akItemReference.MoveTo(akItemReference) and then try casting again. One of these casts should succeed if the item is indeed a MyItemScript item; but then, this whole matter is insufficiently documented and I've only had this level of understanding for a day, as of this writing.
  • Applying AI packages to an NPC
    • You generally don't apply a single package to NPC, but rather a list. For example, each meal that the NPC eats would be powered by separate packages.
    • List of default AI packages (WIP)
    • Possible ways to make merchants
      • SandboxAndKeepEyeOn package set to keep the merchant in the cell where they'll sell wares. Set them to keep an eye on the player. Modify their merchant faction data to make them sell in the area.
      • SitTarget package targeted to a CounterLeanMarker. Modify their merchant faction data to make them sell in the area.
  • Worldspace design
    • Border regions are generally used to enforce hard level boundaries (the player is stopped and notified when they touch one). You can still supplement these by using collision primitives, including flat planes as invisible walls. These are available in the toolbar of the Creation Kit's main window.
    • When adding small amounts of content to a vanilla cell (e.g. a mine entrance), remember that you can avoid the need for direct navmesh edits (and the associated compatibility issues) by placing collision primitives and setting them to L_NAVCUT. At run-time, these will act as modifiers for the navmesh. (Bethesda themselves did this for certain dynamically-spawned statics, such as the Civil War catapults.)
    • The Flatten tool is terrible: it has a minimum radius of 6 vertices and it cannot be undone, so it's only good for blocking out large areas of undesigned terrain. Be very careful to make sure it's turned off before doing Landscape edits in areas you've actually designed and detailed.
    • Fall Forest climate
      • The Fall Forest climate consists primarily of aspen trees, yellow shrubs, and scenery tagged with "FallForest;" however, the occasional pine tree appears as well. As one moves into snowier terrain, pine trees start to replace aspen trees entirely. Pine shrubs don't appear often; I've seen one or two on the small islands in Riften's lake.
    • Wildlife
      • AMbrFrogsForestfallNight_LP (sound effect marker occasionally hidden in lakeside shrubs)
      • critterSpawnPond_Deep (used in Riften's lake)
    • Scenery ideas
      • Small stairway built with StockadeWoodbeams (used on the island for Goldenglow Estates)
      • A wooden fence built with StockadeFreeWalls and StockadeFreewallBeams (used on the island for Goldenglow Estates)
  • Creation Kit bugs
    • Embedded render windows (that is, those found inside dialog boxes) will steal focus onmouseover.
    • The Creation Kit is somewhat crash-prone when trying to select navmesh edges while cover is being drawn, or recently after Find Cover Edges has been used.
    • Edge selection is generally broken when working with navmesh cover anyway.
    • The Creation Kit does not ignore placed effects (e.g. fog) when placing navmesh vertices, or when using the "drop to ground" tool on navmesh vertices. So that's great.
  • Combining multiple vanilla statics into a single NIF
    • Programs needed:
      • NifSkope
      • NifUtilsSuite
        • Make sure this is configured properly. It needs to know where NifSkope's nif.xml is, and it needs to be able to access that file.
    1. Create NifUtilsSuite template file.
      1. Pick the vanilla static whose collision is most representative of the combined static you're building. If you're adding stuff onto a building, pick the building.
      2. Extract its NIF and open it in NifSkope. Delete every block that isn't the root block, a BSXFlags, or a bhkCollisionObject.
      3. Save this stripped-down NIF.
    2. Create the merged static, minus collision.
      • You can copy and paste NiTriShapes from NIF to NIF. Paste all of your statics' NiTriShapes into a single file (under the root node).
      • You can reposition a NiTriShape by selecting it in the sidebar, and then editing its Translation and Rotation in the bottom pane.
      • You can rename a NiTriShape (to keep track of them easier) by selecting it in the sidebar, and then double-clicking the "Txt" icon shown next to the name in the bottom pane.
      • Be sure to delete all collision-related information (which should pretty much just be any bhkCollisionObject blocks).
    3. Create the merged collision mesh.
      1. Use NifUtilsSuite's ChunkExtract to rip each individual static's collision mesh as a NIF. Make sure that ChunkExtract sets NiTriShape names from the collision material.
        • NiTriShape Name: From material
      2. Use NifSkope to combine the individual collision meshes into a single mesh, similarly to how you combined statics earlier. Do not rename any NiTriShapes.
    4. Apply the merged collision mesh to the merged static using NifUtilsSuite's ChunkMerge.
      • Use the template file you created earlier.
      • Be aware that this will overwrite the input file. You should probably create a backup of your merged static.
      • Use "mesh data" as the Collision Source, and "name of NiTriShape" as the Collision Material.
  • Common pitfalls when creating combined statics
    • It seems that NifSkope doesn't always use the right Euler conventions for Skyrim. As such, rotation values won't work quite the same way as they do in the Creation Kit.
    • NifUtilsSuite needs to be able to access NifSkope's nif.xml. If that file is in an administrator-only location (e.g. Program Files), you will need to run NifUtilsSuite as an administrator.
    • NifUtilsSuite will crash if you accidentally tell it to read from a non-existent file, so maybe don't do that. Check your pathnames.

Code snippets

Quality? Functionality? Efficiency? Here, I guarantee nothing!!

Is an ObjectReference an item?

Works as well as is possible given the methods available to us.

Bool Function IsItem(ObjectReference akObject)
   Form akForm = akObject.GetBaseObject()
   If !akForm
      return false
   EndIf
   If akForm as Book
      ;
      ; SKSE grants read access to the Playable flag for books.
      ;
      return (akForm as Book).IsTakeable()
   EndIf
   If (akForm as Ammo) || (akForm as Armor) || (akForm as Ingredient) || (akForm as Key) || (akForm as MiscObject) || (akForm as Potion) || (akForm as Scroll) || (akForm as SoulGem) || (akForm as Weapon)
      ;
      ; Other object types don't have a script-accessible player flag. Sux.
      ;
      return true
   EndIf
   return false
EndFunction