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Minetest-WorldEditAdditions

Extra tools and commands to extend WorldEdit for Minetest

If you can dream of it, it probably belongs here!

Screenshot

Quick Command Reference

Geometry

Misc

Terrain

Statistics

Extras

Tools

Detailed Explanations

//floodfill [<replace_node> [<radius>]]

Floods all connected nodes of the same type starting at pos1 with <replace_node> (which defaults to water_source), in a sphere with a radius of (which defaults to 50).

//floodfill
//floodfill water_source 50
//floodfill glass 25

//overlay <node_name_a> [<chance_a>] <node_name_b> [<chance_b>] [<node_name_N> [<chance_N>]] ...

Places <node_name_a> in the last contiguous air space encountered above the first non-air node. In other words, overlays all top-most nodes in the specified area with <node_name_a>. Optionally supports a mix of node names and chances, as //mix (WorldEdit) and //replacemix (WorldEditAdditions) does.

Will also work in caves, as it scans columns of nodes from top to bottom, skipping every non-air node until it finds one - and only then will it start searching for a node to place the target node on top of.

Note that all-air columns are skipped - so if you experience issues with it not overlaying correctly, try //expand down 1 to add an extra node's space to your defined region.

Note also that columns without any air nodes in them at all are also skipped, so try //expand y 1 to add an extra layer to your defined region.

//overlay grass
//overlay glass
//overlay grass_with_dirt
//overlay grass_with_dirt 10 dirt
//overlay grass_with_dirt 10 dirt 2 sand 1
//overlay sandstone dirt 2 sand 5

//layers [<node_name_1> [<layer_count_1>]] [<node_name_2> [<layer_count_2>]] ...

Finds the first non-air node in each column and works downwards, replacing non-air nodes with a defined list of nodes in sequence. Like WorldEdit for Minecraft's //naturalize command. Speaking of, this command has //naturalise and //naturalize as aliases. Defaults to 1 layer of grass followed by 3 layers of dirt.

The list of nodes has a form similar to that of a chance list you might find in //replacemix, //overlay, or //mix - see the examples below. If the numberr of layers isn't specified, 1 is assumed (i.e. a single layer).

//layers dirt_with_grass dirt 3
//layers sand 5 sandstone 4 desert_stone 2
//layers brick stone 3
//layers cobble 2 dirt

//ellipsoid <rx> <ry> <rz> <node_name>

Creates a solid ellipsoid at position 1 with the radius (rx, ry, rz).

//ellipsoid 10 5 15 ice
//ellipsoid 3 5 10 dirt
//ellipsoid 20 10 40 air

//hollowellipsoid <rx> <ry> <rz> <node_name>

Creates a hollow ellipsoid at position 1 with the radius (rx, ry, rz). Works the same way as //ellipsoid does.

//hollowellipsoid 10 5 15 glass
//hollowellipsoid 21 11 41 stone

//torus <major_radius> <minor_radius> <node_name>

Creates a solid torus at position 1 with the specified major and minor radii. The major radius is the distance from the centre of the torus to the centre of the circle bit, and the minor radius is the radius of the circle bit.

//torus 15 5 stone
//torus 5 3 meselamp

//hollowtorus <major_radius> <minor_radius> <node_name>

Creates a hollow torus at position 1 with the radius major and minor radii. Works the same way as //torus does.

//hollowtorus 10 5 glass
//hollowtorus 21 11 stone

//maze <replace_node> [<path_length> [<path_width> [<seed>]]]

Generates a maze using replace_node as the walls and air as the paths. Uses an algorithm of my own devising. It is guaranteed that you can get from every point to every other point in generated mazes, and there are no loops.

Requires the currently selected area to be at least 3x3x3.

The optional path_length and path_width arguments require additional explanation. When generating a maze, a multi-headed random walk is performed. When the generator decides to move forwards from a point, it does so path_length nodes at a time. path_length defaults to 2.

path_width is easier to explain. It defaults to 1, and is basically the number of nodes wide the path generated is.

Note that path_width must always be at least 1 less than the path_length in order to operate normally.

The last example below shows how to set the path length and width:

//maze ice
//maze stone 2 1 1234
//maze dirt 4 2 56789

//maze3d <replace_node> [<path_length> [<path_width> [<path_depth> [<seed>]]]]

Same as //maze, but adapted for 3d - has all the same properties. Note that currently there's no way to adjust the height of the passageways generated (you'll need to scale the generated maze afterwards).

Requires the currently selected area to be at least 3x3 on the x and z axes.

The optional path_depth parameter defaults to 1 and allows customisation of the height of the paths generated.

//maze3d glass
//maze3d bush_leaves 2 1 1 12345
//maze3d dirt 4 2 2
//maze3d stone 6 3 3 54321

//bonemeal [<strength> [<chance>]]

Requires the bonemeal (repo) mod (otherwise WorldEditAdditions will not register this command and outut a message to the server log). Alias: //flora.

Bonemeals all eligible nodes in the current region. An eligible node is one that has an air node directly above it - note that just because a node is eligible doesn't mean to say that something will actually happen when the bonemeal mod bonemeals it.

Optionally takes a strength value (that's passed to bonemeal:on_use(), the method in the bonemeal mod that is called to actually do the bonemealing). The strength value is a positive integer from 1 to 4 (i.e. 1, 2, 3, or 4) - the default is 1 (the lowest strength).

I observe that a higher strength value gives a higher chance that something will actually grow. In the case of soil or sand nodes, I observe that it increases the area of effect of a single bonemeal action (thus at higher strengths generally you'll probably want a higher chance number - see below). See the bonemeal mod README for more information.

Also optionally takes a chance number. This is the chance that an eligible node will actually get bonemealed, and is a positive integer that defaults to 1. The chance number represents a 1-in-{number} chance to bonemeal any given eligible node, where {number} is the chance number. In other words, the higher the chance number the lower the chance that a node will be bonemealed.

For example, a chance number of 2 would mean a 50% chance that any given eligible node will get bonemealed. A chance number of 16 would be a 6.25% chance, and a chance number of 25 would be 2%.

//bonemeal
//bonemeal 3 25
//bonemeal 4
//bonemeal 1 10
//bonemeal 2 15

//walls <replace_node>

Creates vertical walls of <replace_node> around the inside edges of the defined region.

//walls dirt
//walls stone
//walls goldblock

//replacemix <target_node> [<chance>] <replace_node_a> [<chance_a>] [<replace_node_b> [<chance_b>]] [<replace_node_N> [<chance_N>]] ...

Replaces a given node with a random mix of other nodes. Functions like //mix.

This command is best explained with examples:

//replacemix dirt stone

The above functions just like //replace - nothing special going on here. It replaces all dirt nodes with stone.

Let's make it more interesting:

//replacemix dirt 5 stone

The above replaces 1 in every 5 dirt nodes with stone. Let's get even fancier:

//replacemix stone stone_with_diamond stone_with_gold

The above replaces stone nodes with a random mix of stone_with_diamond and stone_with_gold nodes. But wait - there's more!

//replacemix stone stone_with_diamond stone_with_gold 4

The above replaces stone nodes with a random mix of stone_with_diamond and stone_with_gold nodes as before, but this time in the ratio 1:4 (i.e. for every stone_with_diamond node there will be 4 stone_with_gold nodes). Note that the 1 for stone_with_diamond is implicit there.

If we wanted to put all of the above features together into a single command, then we might do this:

//replacemix dirt 3 sandstone 10 dry_dirt cobble 2

The above replaces 1 in 3 dirt nodes with a mix of sandstone, dry_dirt, and cobble nodes in the ratio 10:1:2. Awesome!

Here are all the above examples together:

//replacemix dirt stone
//replacemix dirt 5 stone
//replacemix stone stone_with_diamond stone_with_gold
//replacemix stone stone_with_diamond stone_with_gold 4
//replacemix dirt 3 sandstone 10 dry_dirt cobble 2

//convolve <kernel> [<width>[,<height>]] [<sigma>]

Advanced version of //smooth from we_env, and one of the few WorldEditAdditions commands to have any aliases (//smoothadv and //conv).

Extracts a heightmap from the defined region and then proceeds to convolve over it with the specified kernel. The kernel can be thought of as the filter that will be applied to the heightmap. Once done, the newly convolved heightmap is applied to the terrain.

Possible kernels:

Kernel Description
box A simple uniform box blur.
pascal A kernel derived from the odd layers of Pascal's Triangle. Slightly less smooth than a Gaussian blur.
gaussian The default. A Gaussian blur - should give the smoothest result, and also the most customisable - see below.

If you can think of any other convolutional filters that would be useful, please open an issue. The code backing this command is very powerful and flexible, so adding additional convolutional filters should be pretty trivial.

The width and height (if specified) refer to the dimensions of the kernel and must be odd integers and are separated by a single comma (and no space). If the height is not specified, it defaults to the width. If using the gaussian kernel, the width and height must be identical. Larger kernels are slower, but produce a more smoothed effect and take more nearby nodes into account for every column. Defaults to a 5x5 kernel.

The sigma value is only applicable to the gaussian kernel, and can be thought of as the 'smoothness' to apply. Greater values result in more smoothing. Default: 2. See the Gaussian blur page on Wikipedia for some pictures showing the effect of the sigma value.

//convolve
//convolve box 7
//convolve pascal 11,3
//convolve gaussian 7
//convolve gaussian 9 10
//convolve gaussian 5 0.2

//count

Counts all the nodes in the defined region and returns the result along with calculated percentages (note that if the chat window used a monospace font, the returned result would be a perfect table. If someone has a hack solution to make the columns line up neatly, please open an issue :D)

//count

//multi <command_a> <command_b> <command_c> .....

Executes multi chat commands in sequence. Intended for WorldEdit commands, but does work with others too. Don't forget a space between commands!

//multi //1 //2 //shift z -10 //sphere 5 sand //shift z 20 //ellipsoid 5 3 5 ice
//multi //1 //hollowtorus 30 5 stone //hollowtorus 20 3 dirt //torus 10 2 dirt_with_grass
//multi /time 7:00 //1 //outset h 20 //outset v 5 //overlay dirt_with_grass //1 //2 //sphere 8 air //shift down 1 //floodfill //reset

//y

Confirms the execution of a command if it could potentially affect a large number of nodes and take a while. This is a regular WorldEdit command.

//y

//n

Prevents the execution of a command if it could potentially affect a large number of nodes and take a while. This is a regular WorldEdit command.

//n

Far Wand

The far wand (worldeditadditions:farwand) is a variant on the traditional WorldEdit wand (worldedit:wand). It looks like this: A picture of the far wand

It functions very similarly to the regular WorldEdit wand, except that it has a much longer range - which can be very useful for working on large-scale terrain for example. It also comes with an associated command to control it.

//farwand skip_liquid (true|false) | maxdist <number>

This command helps control the behaviour of the WorldEditAdditions far wand. Calling it without any arguments shows the current status:

//farwand

You can decide whether you can select liquids or not like so:

//farwand skip_liquid true
//farwand skip_liquid false

You can change the maximum range with the maxdist subcommand:

//farwand maxdist 1000
//farwand maxdist 200
//farwand maxdist 9999

Note that the number there isn't in blocks (because hard maths). It is however proportional to the distance the wand will raycast looks for nodes, so a higher value will result in it raycasting further.

Troubleshooting

If you're experiencing issues with this mod, try checking this FAQ before opening an issue.

I get an error saying that worldedit isn't installed

WorldEditAdditions requires that the worldedit mod is installed as a dependency. Install it and then try launching Minetest (or the minetest-server) again.

I get an error saying that worldedit.register_command() is not a function

This is probably because your version of worldedit is too old. Try updating it. Specifically the worldedit.register_command() function was only added to worldedit in December 2019.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please state in your pull request(s) that you release your contribution under the Mozilla Public License 2.0.

Please also make sure that the logic for every new command has it's own file. For example, the logic for //floodfill goes in worldeditadditions/floodfill.lua, the logic for //overlay goes in worldeditadditions/overlay.lua, etc.

WorldEditAdditions around the web

Are you using WorldEditAdditions for a project? Open an issue and I'll add your project to the below list!

  • (None that I'm aware of yet!)

License

This mod is licensed under the Mozilla Public License 2.0, a copy of which (along with a helpful summary as to what you can and can't do with it) can be found in the LICENSE file in this repository.

All textures however are licenced under CC-BY-SA 4.0 (Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike International 4.0).

If you'd like to do something that the license prohibits, please get in touch as it's possible we can negotiate something.

If WorldEditAdditions has helped you out in a project, please consider adding a little sign in a corner of your project saying so :-)