I'm sorry, but I may have accidentally stolen it. I recently got a burst of minecraftian spirit and am now building things I would not have a few days ago. If I could give some of it back to you I would. On the plus side, however, my log fenced garden is looking quite nice next to my tower-castle and sandstone beach hut.
Also, how does boiling milk make it spoil? Spoiling happens with time, not heat. Boiling hot milk might not taste good but it is still fresh if you just got it.
Unfortunately, anybody really motivated enough will just change their texture pack to make all materials except for chests appear to be transparent. You can't hide from that.
Pretty much this... Your best bet is the aforementioned lava, since changing it in the terrain file doesn't do anything. There is a way to change lava and water textures, but it's probably too much of a hassle for thieving arses.
BTW, InvEdit has been updated and supports these logs properly (ie correct preview pics, no red numbers for the damage...)
This raises the question of whether or not logs can still be registered as damaged in invedit to show up as the log variants or not. I will have to test this sometime.
I think the "darker log" is the pine tree log.
Anyway, good job. I saw this "red number thing on my birch log", but I thought that was only a bug 'coz the INVedit wasn't "updated".
This would not surprise me, I haven't seen any pine trees yet so I'm not sure what they look like. Looking to what this means, we basically could have tons of variations of blocks with same functionality, but different looks in the future. Like having many kinds of flowers, or plank blocks for houses of different woods. Perhaps, even, different kinds of stone to mine. This b itself doesn't mean much, but it could be a sneak peak of things to come.
If modders could do something with this as well, I'm sure they could do some really crazy stuff.
I just discovered something recently while playing with log blocks and invedit. The new white and black wood came up in invedit as a normal log block... with one difference. It was listed as being damaged. When something in invedit is damaged, it has a red number on it- this is how I noticed.
Basically, the new wood block isn't actually a new block at all. It's the old block, but in a "damaged" state, similar to how tools degrade. I did some testing, with other damage numbers to see what would happen. I used a damage of 1, -1, and 3. The white and black logs are 2, so I knew I didn't have to use that. The results were.. interesting.
Logs with the damage -1 and 3 looked exactly the same as the old logs we know and love, but wouldn't stack with them, or each other. The 1 damage block, however, was significantly darker. My theory is that this is either a log of a tree grown in the Nether, or something that has yet to have been used. In addition, I also think this is how charcoal works- instead of looking differently, however, the name is changed. Each log functioned exactly the same as a normal one, and the planks they made stacked with normal planks just fine.
I don't have a server, but if I did, I wouldn't want you on it to be honest. It seems to me that you are a young child, a tad hyperactive, definitely impatient, someone who cannot apparently type in a respectable manner, and a person who enjoys jokes involving pain to one's sensitive bits. None of these things I would like anywhere near me. In fact, if I learned you were a griefer, I would not at all be surprised.
The Consumer of planets has returned! All are doomed! Hide your chunks or let them be eaten by his invisible, gaping maw!
I've seen this before myself, and disconnecting/reconnecting usually worked for me. Could have been worse though, it could have tried to make a new chunk. Then half of your house would have been replaced with a mountain.
Actually, I think they're pretty cool looking. I'm even working on a wall of logs around my future garden on a new world that alternates normal and birch logs. It's only 1 block high so far but it looks really neat.
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Pretty much this... Your best bet is the aforementioned lava, since changing it in the terrain file doesn't do anything. There is a way to change lava and water textures, but it's probably too much of a hassle for thieving arses.
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This raises the question of whether or not logs can still be registered as damaged in invedit to show up as the log variants or not. I will have to test this sometime.
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This would not surprise me, I haven't seen any pine trees yet so I'm not sure what they look like. Looking to what this means, we basically could have tons of variations of blocks with same functionality, but different looks in the future. Like having many kinds of flowers, or plank blocks for houses of different woods. Perhaps, even, different kinds of stone to mine. This b itself doesn't mean much, but it could be a sneak peak of things to come.
If modders could do something with this as well, I'm sure they could do some really crazy stuff.
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Basically, the new wood block isn't actually a new block at all. It's the old block, but in a "damaged" state, similar to how tools degrade. I did some testing, with other damage numbers to see what would happen. I used a damage of 1, -1, and 3. The white and black logs are 2, so I knew I didn't have to use that. The results were.. interesting.
Logs with the damage -1 and 3 looked exactly the same as the old logs we know and love, but wouldn't stack with them, or each other. The 1 damage block, however, was significantly darker. My theory is that this is either a log of a tree grown in the Nether, or something that has yet to have been used. In addition, I also think this is how charcoal works- instead of looking differently, however, the name is changed. Each log functioned exactly the same as a normal one, and the planks they made stacked with normal planks just fine.
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all the yellows flowers are now naturally grow toast-plants.
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I've seen this before myself, and disconnecting/reconnecting usually worked for me. Could have been worse though, it could have tried to make a new chunk. Then half of your house would have been replaced with a mountain.
Poor squid.
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