Temukan sensasi situs game online tak terlupakan di Perisaibet, situs game online downline IDN terpercaya. Dengan keamanan tingkat tinggi, ragam game menarik, bonus menggiurkan, dan sistem downline IDN yang menguntungkan, Perisaibet menjadi pilihan utama.
Hi @hectrol
The only time this happens to me is when description.ext has a typo or other syntax error.
Obvious question, but have you double-checked spelling etc?
Hey @bendy303,
I've actually ran into this exact same problem for an unrelated issue. One trick I've used is to make a global trigger with this condition:
time > 0
Then I'd put whatever code in the activation field. In my case, I used remoteExec and set the JIP parameter to true, which queued it up for when players loaded in.
I'm not sure if it'll be relevant to your use case. How exactly are you trying to add this damage handler? Could you give us an example of your code?
My apologies @Blitzen88 I've obviously misread your post. It was late at night when I looked at it.
The contents of the expression field are saved in a variable within the module. You can give the module a variable name, then use getVariable and setVariable commands to edit.
For example...
// Grab the current contents of the 'expression' field:
_Expression = _Module getVariable "expression";
// Update the contents of the 'expression' field:
_Module setVariable ["expression", {comment "Your code here"}];
Does this help?
That was not the intention.
It's not meant to be condescending, it's meant to make you think before acting. Don't implement instructions, install things, etc without knowing its effects. Or ask. If you don't understand, ASK FIRST!!!!
Actually, I also know better and that's why I don't use spaces to complicate data paths. You can use quotes in cmdline operations but why complicate the path. This also comes from experience.
If you didn't follow the example in it's simplest form without knowing the ramifications, and you use spaces; I'm not responsible for that.
I actually really don't care how super intelligent I come of or not...
Maybe it's an intelligent person's dilemma looking around at all the idiots being too lazy to understand.
(And no that's not directed at you since you seem to imply that... it's a generalism. But, if the shoe fits)
There's basics to computing you need to know before using a computer or to follow basic instructions.
Even Bohemia's article covering this states you need some basic knowledge.