Baritone AI pathfinder

Baritone AI pathfinder

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How to add Baritone to MCP-Reborn

SemmieDev opened this issue ยท 9 comments

commented

What do you need help with?

So I am making my own hacked client using MCP-Reborn and IntelliJ IDEA. Then I got the idea to add Baritone to my client. I am not that good with Java, but I was able to add Baritone to my client. All errors fixed, and my client is able to start up. But when I try to use Baritone by doing any of his commands, my message just gets send to the server and nothing else happens. I did find one line in the log that makes me think I am just launching the client wrong: Completely ignored arguments: [--tweakClass, baritone.launch.BaritoneTweaker]. Please help me fix this, and please don't use to difficult words unless you can't otherwise. If any more information is needed just ask it in the comments.

Final checklist

  • I know how to properly use check boxes
  • I have not used any OwO's or UwU's in this question.
commented

How did you add it?

commented

I just copied all the files in the correct place, then ran the client with the tweak class set. Then I got the errors, fixed them, ran the client, fixed the errors, until all the errors were fixed. But then I got the problems I said in my main question. Its most likely the worst way I could have added it but as I said, I don't know THAT much of Java yet. Oh, also here is my run configuration:
SharedScreenshot

commented

uh yea you don't do that

commented

add it to your gradle with the instructions in setup.md

commented

Do I have to copy over any files? (Sorry for late reaction)

commented

Also might I add, why do you even feel the need to use MCP-Reborn, when you could just use ForgeGradle 3.+, as other clients can be made in it just fine. Using an unofficial product would just be over-complicating things imo.

commented

And distributing MCP clients is completely against mojang's EULA

commented

I'm closing this because we don't even really support MCP clients, do it properly or don't do it at all

commented

No, you do not do that. You do it properly, with Gradle.