If I open it inside the game, it will very quickly kill all the grass. I don't want that. I asked if there's a way to download the level .dat directly.
A little bit of guessing gave me this: minecraft.net/level/level.dat?user=...&id=...
:biggrin.gif:
I still want to know how other people found other things, some of them aren't that obvious. I mean, how would they know to add "/client/" to the address, or "/level/"? :tongue.gif:
I still want to know how other people found other things, some of them aren't that obvious. I mean, how would they know to add "/client/" to the address, or "/level/"? :tongue.gif:
Look at the html source of the page you use to play Minecraft.
Or minecraft.net/client/minecraft.jar
What I want to know is:
How do you find it?
Where can I download my online saved levels?
Kinda unrelated, is there any way to upload saves without first loading them? Any way without external tools?
Thanks :biggrin.gif:
If I open it inside the game, it will very quickly kill all the grass. I don't want that. I asked if there's a way to download the level .dat directly.
A little bit of guessing gave me this: minecraft.net/level/level.dat?user=...&id=...
:biggrin.gif:
I still want to know how other people found other things, some of them aren't that obvious. I mean, how would they know to add "/client/" to the address, or "/level/"? :tongue.gif:
Look at the html source of the page you use to play Minecraft.
Script to edit Minecraft maps with Paint3D
all of the pages are jsp not htmlErr nvm
That can be found by either watching packets or decompiling the source code.
There is:
./level/load.html
./level/save.html
./listmaps.jsp
./heartbeat.jsp
Wrong, the load and save are HTML files with javascript functions embedded in them.
What does each one do? How do you use it? Also you forgot ./level/level.dat :tongue.gif: