I've seen on YouTube that many people make world seeds with their custom seed names and stuff like that, and I want to make a world seed that has a big house, a farm with a lake behind it, a ravine behind the house, a few camps (1 at a desert, 1 in snowland, 1 in a forest), and a village near the house. Anybody know how I can make a seed? Thanks!
First, I'm actually a girl.. the dumb thing keeps failing to upload my picture for some reason. Second, I'm actually a noob.. haha.. well, thanks for answering!
First, I'm actually a girl.. the dumb thing keeps failing to upload my picture for some reason. Second, I'm actually a noob.. haha.. well, thanks for answering!
Why can I use words instead of numbers? Letters and symbols on computers are stored in Bytes, presumably minecraft converts these bytes into decimal numbers, for example, the letter m = 01101101 and converted into decimal that is 109. Capital letters and lower case letters have different values in binary, so if you do decide to use words, make sure you use the correct capitalization.
Goto the, currently, last page of posts in the Seeds FAQ and scroll down to my post (#403) and read it.
There I explain how MC parses text seeds into numeric ones. Also there are CONSIDEABLY more possible numeric seeds than there are unique text seeds. (Many text seeds hash down to the same number.)
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
There are no dangerous weapons. There are only dangerous people. R.A. Heinlein
If you aren't part of the solution, then you obviously weren't properly dissolved.
Let's say I had a world in which I had a massive superstructure and amazing redstone creations. Say it was deleted by accident. Is there any procedure to follow before hand, so that I could re-generate that world, just as it was when it was deleted? That's what I want to know.
Let's say I had a world in which I had a massive superstructure and amazing redstone creations. Say it was deleted by accident. Is there any procedure to follow before hand, so that I could re-generate that world, just as it was when it was deleted? That's what I want to know.
Short answer: no.
Any more than a tornado can come by and rebuild a town that was totally destroyed by a tornado the previous week.
A seed contains no specific information about the world it produces. It only gives the Minecraft world generator a starting point for it's decision making.
The only reason that two people can use two different computers and enter the same seed into the same version of Mindcraft and end up with the same identical world is because the world generator, when it doesn't glitch, is perfectly deterministic.
Once you enter that world you change it. The more you interact with it the more different it becomes relative to the original state. These changes are stored in the disk files that Minecraft stores on your, or the server's, disk drive. If those files are destroyed or changed the information about that world is lost or changed forever.
There is no "undo" function in Minecraft directly.
You would have to back up your world periodically to have a, relatively current, position to restore to if the world data is destroyed.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
There are no dangerous weapons. There are only dangerous people. R.A. Heinlein
If you aren't part of the solution, then you obviously weren't properly dissolved.
You should back up your save folder occasionally if you've got a lot of stuff you really want to keep. If you go into "Edit Profile" in the launcher, there is an "Open Game Dir" button that will open your Minecraft folder and your save folder is in there.
That would be a little problematic in my case.
My saves folder contains 5,186 files in 5,174 folders for a total of 2.85 Gb.
I have 457 saved worlds and they only go back to May of 2012 when my previous machine died.
(I usually create and delete 20 worlds a day) and keep maybe keep 2 or 3 created worlds a week.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
There are no dangerous weapons. There are only dangerous people. R.A. Heinlein
If you aren't part of the solution, then you obviously weren't properly dissolved.
First, I'm actually a girl.. the dumb thing keeps failing to upload my picture for some reason. Second, I'm actually a noob.. haha.. well, thanks for answering!
happened to me too. Go to your profile and go to settings, i guess it is a bug
Oh :/ Sorry. I guess I'm the ignorant one here
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Goto the, currently, last page of posts in the Seeds FAQ and scroll down to my post (#403) and read it.
There I explain how MC parses text seeds into numeric ones. Also there are CONSIDEABLY more possible numeric seeds than there are unique text seeds. (Many text seeds hash down to the same number.)
There are no dangerous weapons. There are only dangerous people. R.A. Heinlein
If you aren't part of the solution, then you obviously weren't properly dissolved.
The latest release of Amidst, version 4.6 can be found here:
https://github.com/toolbox4minecraft/amidst/releases
You should probably also read this:
https://www.minecraftforum.net/forums/mapping-and-modding-java-edition/minecraft-tools/2970854-amidst-map-explorer-for-minecraft-1-14
You can find me on the Minecraft Forums Discord server.
https://discord.gg/wGrQNKX
Short answer: no.
Any more than a tornado can come by and rebuild a town that was totally destroyed by a tornado the previous week.
A seed contains no specific information about the world it produces. It only gives the Minecraft world generator a starting point for it's decision making.
The only reason that two people can use two different computers and enter the same seed into the same version of Mindcraft and end up with the same identical world is because the world generator, when it doesn't glitch, is perfectly deterministic.
Once you enter that world you change it. The more you interact with it the more different it becomes relative to the original state. These changes are stored in the disk files that Minecraft stores on your, or the server's, disk drive. If those files are destroyed or changed the information about that world is lost or changed forever.
There is no "undo" function in Minecraft directly.
You would have to back up your world periodically to have a, relatively current, position to restore to if the world data is destroyed.
There are no dangerous weapons. There are only dangerous people. R.A. Heinlein
If you aren't part of the solution, then you obviously weren't properly dissolved.
The latest release of Amidst, version 4.6 can be found here:
https://github.com/toolbox4minecraft/amidst/releases
You should probably also read this:
https://www.minecraftforum.net/forums/mapping-and-modding-java-edition/minecraft-tools/2970854-amidst-map-explorer-for-minecraft-1-14
You can find me on the Minecraft Forums Discord server.
https://discord.gg/wGrQNKX
That would be a little problematic in my case.
My saves folder contains 5,186 files in 5,174 folders for a total of 2.85 Gb.
I have 457 saved worlds and they only go back to May of 2012 when my previous machine died.
(I usually create and delete 20 worlds a day) and keep maybe keep 2 or 3 created worlds a week.
There are no dangerous weapons. There are only dangerous people. R.A. Heinlein
If you aren't part of the solution, then you obviously weren't properly dissolved.
The latest release of Amidst, version 4.6 can be found here:
https://github.com/toolbox4minecraft/amidst/releases
You should probably also read this:
https://www.minecraftforum.net/forums/mapping-and-modding-java-edition/minecraft-tools/2970854-amidst-map-explorer-for-minecraft-1-14
You can find me on the Minecraft Forums Discord server.
https://discord.gg/wGrQNKX