Major things to note:
Class renames: https://gist.github.com/LexManos/44dd211f90f498ad4015279b103dff86
Tile Entities are now packed in the ChunkData packet.
Forge intends to work around this to better support large moded worlds, but for the time being modders should implement the new function carefully and only send what data they need to!
Minecraft's codebase now has annotations, these are directly from Mojang and should be adheared to!
Added support for package-info.java's containing @Nullable information for all MC code base.
Modders can now modify and reference internal elements of a loot table by name.
Editing can ONLY be done in the event and any external editing will cause a exception to be thrown.
See this gist for more information: https://gist.github.com/LexManos/77c983d67b9ad27010428478b66d50fd
When combined with @Optional this should address all issues of soft dependancy on mods/apis.
This also addresses the issue of dynamic functionality in TileEntities/Entities.
Current capability providers: TileEntity, Entity, ItemStack
Also added INBTSerializeable, a generic interface for game objects that can be written to/from NBT tags.
Vanilla capabilities will be coming soon, mostly on request and review.
So start requesting capabiliteis on vanilla/Forge features.
Some notes:
Almost all int x, int y, int z parameters have been changed to BlockPos class
ForgeDirection has been removed, replaced by net.minecraft.util.EnumFacing.
All FML classes have moved from packet cpw.mods.fml to net.minecraftforge.fml
Fluid Rendering has been disabled for the time being, to be re-evaulated and a test mod created for it.
Minecraft now uses a Model based system for rendering blocks and Items. The intention is to expand the model format to better suit modder's needed once it is evaulated.
As such, The model loaders from Forge have been removed, to be replaced by expanding vanilla's model format.
Metadata has been extracted out in Minecraft to IBlockState, which holds a list of properties instead of magic number metadata. DO NOT listen to the fearmongering, you can do EVERYTHING with block states you could previously with metadata.
Stencil Bits are disabled entirely by for the main Display, Modders must enable and recreate the FrameBuffer if they wish to use Stencil Bits.
Before calling "ItemStack.tryPlaceItemInWorld", a recording flag is turned on for
setBlock to capture a blocksnapshot for each block that attempts to be placed.
If 1 block is captured, a "BlockEvent.PlaceEvent" is fired to notify mods.
If 2 or more blocks are captured, a "BlockEvent.PlaceEvent" is fired first with the first block
captured followed by a "BlockEvent.MultiPlaceEvent" with all captured blocks. This extra event
is required for items that have the ability to place 2 or more blocks such as a BlockBed.
If either event is cancelled, the recorded block snapshot(s), item stacksize, and item meta will
revert back to the captured snapshot(s).
If the events are not cancelled, a notification will be sent to clients and block physics will be updated.
What this means for mods is Forge will be able to capture all player block placement automatically and fire
a PlaceEvent and/or MultiPlaceEvent.
If for whatever reason your mod does not use the standard placement methods then you will need to fire the
appropriate placement events in order to notify mods/servers.
This commit also includes a new utility class called BlockSnapshot which is serializable. This new class is used in conjunction with
both PlaceEvent and MultiPlaceEvent in order to record a snapshot of block space before it is altered. This
allows us to restore the block(s) if an event is cancelled. The class also provides the ability to restore a snapshot
to any location using the restoreToLocation method. This should be helpful to many mods that are looking to be able
to capture block data then restore it to back to any location required.