Difference between revisions of "NML:Block Example"

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== Blocks ==
{{NMLNavLanguageStructure}}
 
   
 
NML files are mainly composed from blocks. A block starts with the type of the block, optional arguments and then the contents enclosed by curly braces. Nearly all NML files will start with a [[NML:GRF|grf-block]]. The grf-block takes no parameters and is one of the simplest blocks there is. Following is an example grf-block.
 
NML files are mainly composed from blocks. A block starts with the type of the block, optional arguments and then the contents enclosed by curly braces. Nearly all NML files will start with a [[NML:GRF|grf-block]]. The grf-block takes no parameters and is one of the simplest blocks there is. Following is an example grf-block.

Revision as of 00:50, 9 September 2011

Blocks

NML files are mainly composed from blocks. A block starts with the type of the block, optional arguments and then the contents enclosed by curly braces. Nearly all NML files will start with a grf-block. The grf-block takes no parameters and is one of the simplest blocks there is. Following is an example grf-block.

 grf {
 	grfid : "AB\02\03";
 	name : string(STR_GRF_NAME);
 	desc : string(STR_GRF_DESCRIPTION);
 	version: 10;
 	min_compatible_version: 5;
 }

Let's look at this code line for line.

 grf {

This block is a grf-block. A grf-block has no parameters. The '{' is the start of the block content.

 	grfid : "AB\02\03";

This line sets the grfid of the resulting grf. The value is the letters AB followed by a byte with value 2 and then another one with value 3. The semicolon marks the end of the statement.

 	name : string(STR_GRF_NAME);

The name of the grf. In NML nearly all strings are put in language files. The format of the language files is described in another section. For now just assume a string with the name STR_GRF_NAME exists. To reference a string from the language file you use string(<stringname>) where <stringname> should be replaced by the actual name of the string.

 	desc : string(STR_GRF_DESCRIPTION);

This looks a lot like the previous line, only it sets the description instead of the name.

 	version : 10;

For a new grf you should set the version to 1. Every time you release a new version you should increase the version field by at least 1.

 	min_compatible_version : 5;

For a new NewGRF you should set the min_compatible_version to 1. Every time you change something in your newgrf which makes it incompatible to previous versions, you should set min_compatible_version to the current version. Changes which make a NewGRF incompatible to previous versions are most functional changes to existing behaviour, among others: changing vehicleIDs as well as some of their properties, changing industry layouts, railtype compatibility, changing (de-)activation conditions... Adding new, additional things and expanding existing behaviour (without changing the current one) is mostly considered safe).

 }

This marks the end of the last-opened block, in this case the grf-block.