/Hbm-s-Nuclear-Tech-GIT

A flaming wreck of a minecraft mod about nuclear technology that is somehow still in development.

Primary LanguageJavaGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

HBM's Nuclear Tech Mod for Minecraft 1.7.10

NTM on Modrinth

NTM on CurseForge

This is for 1.7.10! For 1.12, check out these projects:

For 1.18, try Martin's remake: https://github.com/MartinTheDragon/Nuclear-Tech-Mod-Remake/releases

Downloading pre-compiled versions from GitHub

Simply navigate to "Releases" on the right side of the page, download links for the compiled JAR as well as the corresponding source code are under the "Assets" category below the changelog. Make sure to review all changelogs when updating!

Building from source

Tired of waiting until the next version comes out? Here is a tutorial on how to compile the very newest version yourself: Please note that these installation instructions are assuming you're running Microsoft Windows operating system. Linux users should know what to do by looking at the same guide.

  1. Make sure you have JDK8 installed. If not, download it from adoptium.net
  2. If you don't have git installed, download&install it from here.
  3. Open up "Git Bash":
    • Press Windows Button, type "Git Bash" and press ENTER
  4. Enter the directory where you would like the sources to be (advanced users can use any directory)
    cd $HOME/Downloads
  1. Download the source code:
    git clone https://github.com/HbmMods/Hbm-s-Nuclear-Tech-GIT.git
  1. Enter the source code directory
    cd Hbm-s-Nuclear-Tech-GIT
  1. Build the mod
    ./gradlew build
  1. Locate the mod file.
    1. Open up your file explorer.
    2. Navigate to the location where you downloaded the sources.
      • If you exactly followed step 1, it should be C:/Users/%USER%/Downloads.
    3. Enter the downloaded source tree.
    4. Navigate to build/libs.
    5. Grab the "HBM-NTM-.jar" one.
      • This is your mod file. You can install it like any other mod by putting it into your mods directory.

Contributing

If you want to make some changes to the mod, follow this guide:

  1. Follow steps 1-2 from Building from source section
  2. Create a directory where the repository will reside, using a name that is not "Hbm-s-Nuclear-Tech-GIT"
  3. Download the forge src from here and extract it into the directory.
  4. Download the source code:
  • Using Git Bash, enter wherever your directory is located:
    cd $HOME/Downloads
  • Download the source code:
    git clone https://github.com/HbmMods/Hbm-s-Nuclear-Tech-GIT.git
  • Move or copy every file within the new folder into your directory, making sure to overwrite any files.
  • Feel free to delete the remaining folder and rename your directory (such as "Hbm-s-Nuclear-Tech-GIT")
  1. Enter the source directory
    cd Hbm-s-Nuclear-Tech-GIT
  1. Setup forge decompilation workspace
    ./gradlew setupDecompWorkspace

Necessary for Eclipse users

  1. Generate eclipse files
    ./gradlew eclipse
  1. Switch to the eclipse folder inside your directory as a workspace.
  2. If necessary, make sure that Eclipse is using the JDK8.
    • On Linux, enter Windows>Preferences>Java>Installed JREs.
      • Click search to navigate to /usr/lib/jvm and open it. Select the Java 8 JDK (e.g., java-8-openjdk).
      • Afterwards, enter Execution Environment, select JavaSE-1.8, and select the jre listed as a [perfect match]
    • On Windows, you may need to set your JAVA_HOME.
      • Search for Environment Variables and click Edit the System Environment Variables.
      • Click Environment Variables. Click new under System Variables.
      • Enter JAVA_HOME under Variable Name and enter the path to your JDK 8 under Variable Value (e.g., C:\Program-Files\Java\jdk1.8.0_102).
      • In Eclipse, now enter Windows>Preferences>Java>Installed JREs.
      • Click Add Standard VM; in the JRE home, navigate to the directory where the JDK is installed, then click finish and select it.
  3. Code!

License

This software is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3. In short: This software is free, you may run the software freely, create modified versions, distribute this software and distribute modified versions, as long as the modified software too has a free software license (with an exception for linking to this software, as stated by the "Lesser" part of the LGPL, where this may not be required). You win this round, Stallman. The full license can be found in the LICENSE and LICENSE.LESSER files.