Okay so, I have been watching some YouTube videos about how to turn the enchanting table language to English and they said I have to access the minecraft.jar file witch is located in the Bin folder. And I know that the bin folder has been removed since 1.6 but I have had minecraft since 1.4 and never seen a Bin folder in my .minecraft folder
Trying to turn the enchanting language into english is a waste of time to begin with considering it's made of random words that are not related to the enchantment you get in any way.
But just to satisfy your curiosity about the /bin folder, it was retired a year or so ago. Now the game jars are stored in the /versions folder. If you want 1.7.9 you would open /versions/1.7.9/1.7.9.jar
Trying to turn the enchanting language into english is a waste of time to begin with considering it's made of random words that are not related to the enchantment you get in any way.
But just to satisfy your curiosity about the /bin folder, it was retired a year or so ago. Now the game jars are stored in the /versions folder. If you want 1.7.9 you would open /versions/1.7.9/1.7.9.jar
Okay Thank You, but I just thought that I would have one because I had minecraft since 1.4
But just to satisfy your curiosity about the /bin folder, it was retired a year or so ago. Now the game jars are stored in the /versions folder. If you want 1.7.9 you would open /versions/1.7.9/1.7.9.jar
Just to note, you can't just mod the jar; you'll have to rename it so the launcher doesn't automatically update when it sees that it doesn't match the one on Mojang's servers (prior to the new launcher you had to manually update). Otherwise, resource packs should be used to change textures (you can still change them in the jar but there isn't really a point with how easy it is to make a resource pack; open the jar, find the file you want to change (you only need the file(s) being changed, not every resource) and put it in a resource pack following the folder structure in the jar, as detailed here).
Okay Thank You, but I just thought that I would have one because I had minecraft since 1.4
Me too, started playing when the game was at v1.4.6. Back then we were still using the old launcher, which now is retired and I think it no longer works at all, according to recent reports from some users. Basically during 1.6 development Mojang changed the whole architecture of the system and the end result was new folder structure and a brand new, game version-independent launcher. Of course many users don't pay much attention to the technicalities of the updates and wouldn't know exactly what changed, so I can understand your surprise.
Please help,
- MylesPlaysMC
I made my own shader pack, by the way.
But just to satisfy your curiosity about the /bin folder, it was retired a year or so ago. Now the game jars are stored in the /versions folder. If you want 1.7.9 you would open /versions/1.7.9/1.7.9.jar
Thanks, but I was just using that as an example.
Okay Thank You, but I just thought that I would have one because I had minecraft since 1.4
Just to note, you can't just mod the jar; you'll have to rename it so the launcher doesn't automatically update when it sees that it doesn't match the one on Mojang's servers (prior to the new launcher you had to manually update). Otherwise, resource packs should be used to change textures (you can still change them in the jar but there isn't really a point with how easy it is to make a resource pack; open the jar, find the file you want to change (you only need the file(s) being changed, not every resource) and put it in a resource pack following the folder structure in the jar, as detailed here).
TheMasterCaver's First World - possibly the most caved-out world in Minecraft history - includes world download.
TheMasterCaver's World - my own version of Minecraft largely based on my views of how the game should have evolved since 1.6.4.
Why do I still play in 1.6.4?
Me too, started playing when the game was at v1.4.6. Back then we were still using the old launcher, which now is retired and I think it no longer works at all, according to recent reports from some users. Basically during 1.6 development Mojang changed the whole architecture of the system and the end result was new folder structure and a brand new, game version-independent launcher. Of course many users don't pay much attention to the technicalities of the updates and wouldn't know exactly what changed, so I can understand your surprise.