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Chat Components
Chat Components are used to create rich text messages in Minecraft. They can include formatting, interactivity, and nested components. Kore
has functions to create and manipulate Chat Components in a datapack.
Note that they always works by groups named ChatComponents
, whenever you create a chat component, you actually create a ChatComponents
,
and you can chain multiple components together using the +
operator.
Minecraft sometimes does not allow "complex" chat components with data resolving (score
, nbt
and entity
chat components), if you use
them, you'll get an empty text component. Simple chat components are inheriting the SimpleComponent
interface, and you have a
containsOnlySimpleComponents
property to check if a ChatComponents
only contains simple components.
You also have a containsOnlyText()
function to check if a ChatComponents
only contains plain text components with no formatting.
-
text
- The text to display. -
bold
- Whether the text is bold. -
clickEvent
- The action to perform when the text is clicked. -
color
- The color of the text. -
extra
- Additional components to display after this one (prefer using the+
operator). -
font
- The font to use. -
hoverEvent
- The action to perform when the text is hovered over. -
insertion
- The text to insert into the chat when the text is shift-clicked. -
italic
- Whether the text is italic. -
obfuscated
- Whether the text is obfuscated. -
strikethrough
- Whether the text is strikethrough. -
underlined
- Whether the text is underlined.
The PlainTextComponent
displays simple text with optional formatting such as color and bold.
To create a PlainTextComponent
, use the textComponent
function.
val plainText = textComponent("Hello, world!") {
color = Color.RED
bold = true
}
In-game output:
Components can be combined using the +
operator, use the text
function to create a simple text component and not a ChatComponents
.
val combinedComponents = textComponent("Hello, ") + text("world!") {
color = Color.RED
bold = true
}
In-game output:
(only the "world!" part is bold and red)
The EntityComponent
displays the name of an entity selected by a selector. If multiple entities are found, their names are displayed in
the form Name1, Name2
etc.
The separator
property can be used to change the separator between the names of the entities.
If no entities are found, the component displays nothing.
val entityComponent = entityComponent(self())
In-game example:
The KeybindComponent
displays a keybind. The keybind is displayed in the player's keybind settings.
val keybindComponent = keybindComponent("key.sprint")
In-game example:
The NbtComponent
displays NBT data from a block, an entity, or a storage. The interpret
property can be used to interpret the NBT data
as a text component, if the parsing fails, nothing is displayed.
The nbt
property can be used to specify the path to the NBT data.
If nbt
points to an array, then it will display all the elements joined in the form Element1, Element2
etc.
The separator
property can be used to change the separator between the elements of the array.
val nbtComponent = nbtComponent("Health", entity = nearestEntity {
type = EntityType.CREEPER
})
In-game output:
The ScoreComponent
displays the score of an entity for a specific objective. The name
property can be used to specify the name of the
entity whose score to display, it can be a selector or a literal name (will use the player with that name). It can also be *
to select the
entity seeing the text component.
The objective
property can be used to specify the name of the objective to display the score of.
A value
property can be used to specify a fixed value to display regardless of the score.
val scoreComponent = scoreComponent("test")
In-game output:
The TranslatedTextComponent
displays translated text using translation keys. You can also pass arguments to the translation key with the
with
argument, which should be a list of text components or strings.
A fallback
property can be used to specify a fallback text if the translation key is not found.
val translatedTextComponent = translatedTextComponent("chat.type.text", "Ayfri", "Hello !")
In-game example:
Hover events display extra information when the text is hovered over, it can be either text, an item, or an entity. Use showText
to
display text, showItem
to display an item, and showEntity
to display an entity.
Note that to show an entity, you have to have its UUID as a string.
val hoverEventComponent = textComponent("Hover over me!") {
hoverEvent {
showText("Hello, world!")
}
}
In-game output:
val hoverItemComponent = textComponent("Hover over me!") {
hoverEvent {
showItem(Items.DIAMOND_SWORD {
damage(5)
})
}
}
In-game output:
Click events perform an action when the text is clicked. The action can be to:
- Change the page of the book if reading a book
- Copy some text to the clipboard
- Open a file
- Open a URL
- Run a command
- Suggest a command (insert the command in the chat but don't run it)
val clickEventComponent = textComponent("Click me!") {
clickEvent {
runCommand {
say("Hello, world!")
}
}
}
Explore the different pages:
- Home
- Chat Components
- Configuration
- Creating a Datapack
- Functions
- Data-Driven Features:
- Scoreboards
Helpers: