Building a Command¶
The first step is to get a new CommandSpec builder. The builder provides methods to modify the command help messages, command arguments and the command logic. These methods can be chained.
To finally build the command, you’ll want to call the CommandSpec.Builder#build() method.
After that, you have to register the command.
Example: Building a Simple Command¶
import org.spongepowered.api.Sponge;
import org.spongepowered.api.text.Text;
import org.spongepowered.api.command.spec.CommandSpec;
PluginContainer plugin = ...;
CommandSpec myCommandSpec = CommandSpec.builder()
.description(Text.of("Hello World Command"))
.permission("myplugin.command.helloworld")
.executor(new HelloWorldCommand())
.build();
Sponge.getCommandManager().register(plugin, myCommandSpec, "helloworld", "hello", "test");
Overview of the CommandSpec builder methods¶
Method | Description |
---|---|
executor |
Defines the command logic (See Writing a Command Executor). Setting the executor is required if no child commands are set. |
arguments |
Sets the argument specification for this command (See Argument Parsing). |
permission |
Set the permission that will be checked before using this command. |
description |
A short, one-line description of this command’s purpose that will be displayed by the help system. |
extendedDescription |
Sets an extended description to use in longer help listings. Will be appended to the short description. |
child |
Adds a child command to this command with its aliases (See Child Commands). |
children |
Sets the child commands of this command with their aliases (See Child Commands). |
inputTokenizer |
Defines how the arguments will be parsed. By default, the parser splits the command input by spaces. Quotations count as a single argument. Example: |
build |
Builds the command. After that, you have to register the command. |
Writing a Command Executor¶
The only required component to build a simple command is the command executor class, which contains the logic of the command.
The class has to implement the CommandExecutor interface, which defines the CommandExecutor#execute(CommandSource, CommandContext) method. The method is called on command execution and has two arguments:
- The source of the command call (e.g. the console, a command block or a player)
- The command context object, which contains the parsed arguments (See Argument Parsing)
Example: Simple Command Executor¶
import org.spongepowered.api.command.CommandException;
import org.spongepowered.api.command.CommandResult;
import org.spongepowered.api.command.CommandSource;
import org.spongepowered.api.command.args.CommandContext;
import org.spongepowered.api.command.spec.CommandExecutor;
public class HelloWorldCommand implements CommandExecutor {
@Override
public CommandResult execute(CommandSource src, CommandContext args) throws CommandException {
src.sendMessage(Text.of("Hello World!"));
return CommandResult.success();
}
}
Tip
You can use anonymous classes to define the command executor in the command build process (See the example in the Argument Parsing page).
Player-Only Commands¶
Sometimes it is necessary that only players can execute a command (e.g. a /suicide
command).
Perform an instanceof
check to determine the type of the CommandSource:
import org.spongepowered.api.entity.living.player.Player;
import org.spongepowered.api.command.source.CommandBlockSource;
import org.spongepowered.api.command.source.ConsoleSource;
if (src instanceof Player) {
Player player = (Player) src;
player.sendMessage(Text.of("Hello " + player.getName() + "!"));
}
else if(src instanceof ConsoleSource) {
src.sendMessage(Text.of("Hello GLaDOS!"));
// The Cake Is a Lie
}
else if(src instanceof CommandBlockSource) {
src.sendMessage(Text.of("Hello Companion Cube!"));
// <3
}
Note
We recommend you to add an optional [player]
argument to make the command console-friendly (e.g. /suicide
[player]
).
The easiest solution for this is to append a playerOrSource
command element (See Argument Parsing).
Command Results¶
The CommandExecutor#execute()
method must always return a CommandResult. In most cases it is sufficient
to return CommandResult#success() if the command was successful or CommandResult#empty() if it
wasn’t. In cases where more information needs to be conveyed, a CommandResult#builder() should be used. The
builder provides the several various methods that accepts an integer and will set the attribute of the same name. All
attributes that are not set by the builder will be empty.
Command blocks can use those values to modify scoreboard stats, which then can be used for elaborate constructions consisting of multiple command blocks. A tutorial how the data is accessed can be found here.
Example: Building a CommandResult¶
CommandResult result = CommandResult.builder()
.affectedEntities(42)
.successCount(1)
.build();
This example uses a builder to create a CommandResult
for a command which affected 42 entities and was successful.
Error Handling¶
The execute()
method may also throw a CommandException, signaling that an error occurred while trying to
execute the command. If such an Exception is thrown, its message will be displayed to the command source, formatted as
an error. Also, the commands usage message will be displayed. An ArgumentParseException, a subtype of
CommandException
is automatically thrown if the commands arguments could not be parsed.