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-- Energy Network Description --
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There are currently three different types of energy network blocks:
- energy sources, e.g. generators or the output side of a storage block/transformer
- energy sinks, e.g. machines or the input side of a storage block/transformer
- conductors, e.g. cables
Note that storage blocks or transformers are both sources and sinks.
All those blocks have to have a tile entity which has to implement the interface corresponding to
its function and also post events to the Forge event bus.
The energy generation, distribution and consumption is strictly limited to the simulating (server)
side, use the proper side checks before posting the related events. One possibility is to check for
FMLCommonHandler.instance().getEffectiveSide().isClient() being false.
The energy network works by calculating the energy flow between the sources which offer energy
through getOfferedEnergy() and the sinks which request energy through demandedEnergyUnits().
Conductors will carry the energy over a distance. Once the energy distribution is calculated, the
energy net will update the sources and sinks through drawEnergy() and injectEnergyUnits() respectively.
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-- Energy Network Events --
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The energy network currently requires 2 events to manage its internal representation of the grids:
-- EnergyTileLoadEvent --
For all energy network tiles (sources, sinks, conductors) you have to post an EnergyTileLoadEvent.
The event has to be posted as soon as the implementing tile entity is fully loaded, usually after
loading the chunk which contains it or after the user placing the block.
The energy net implementation will use the event to add it to its energy grid map, taking it into
account for further energy transfers.
You can detect the loading by either using the 1st iteration of updateEntity() or by waiting for
the next world tick after TileEntity.validate(). The 2nd approach is obviously more sophisticated
and requires to use some tick queuing mechanism.
The event can by posted as following:
MinecraftForge.EVENT_BUS.post(new EnergyTileLoadEvent(this));
-- EnergyTileUnloadEvent --
Another event every energy tile has to post is the EnergyTileUnloadEvent.
The event has to be posted as soon as the implementing tile entity is being unloaded, either by
unloading the containing chunk or by destroying the block containing it.
It's possible to detect the unloading by triggering on both the beginning of
TileEntity.invalidate() and the beginning of TileEntity.onChunkUnload().
It is important that the tile entity is still properly linked to the world while posting the unload
event, otherwise the energy net can't find all affected connections.
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-- Participating Block Requirements --
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The energy net blocks have to do the following to work properly:
-- energy source --
An energy source has to post the following events:
- EnergyTileLoadEvent on load
- EnergyTileUnloadEvent on unload
Additionally the interface IEnergySource has to be implemented.
-- energy sink --
An energy sink has to post the following events:
- EnergyTileLoadEvent on load
- EnergyTileUnloadEvent on unload
Additionally the interface IEnergySink has to be implemented.
-- energy conductor --
An energy conductor has to post the following events:
- EnergyTileLoadEvent on load
- EnergyTileUnloadEvent on unload
Additionally the interface IEnergyConductor has to be implemented.
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-- Energy Network Delegates --
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A delegate is a separate object which performs tasks for the original object, in this case handling
the energy net interaction.
The TileEntity instances used by the events don't have to be the same as the in-world TileEntity
instance for the corresponding position, it can be delegated to a separate TileEntity instance.
This separate instance (delegate) needs to have its world and xyz coordinate fields set to match
the in-world instance. The delegate implements the energy net interfaces and is added and removed
to/from the energy net through EnergyTileLoadEvent and EnergyTileUnloadEvent.
Separating the interfaces through a delegate allows to isolate the IC2 API usage into separate
classes an potentially share common code like an input buffer with battery discharging outside the
class hierarchy.
It's even possible to use an ic2 energy net delegate alongside an in-world TileEntity which isn't
designed to work with ic2 energy at all, like making a furnace electric by receiving energy through
a delegate and adding the corresponding fuel amount to the in-world furnace TileEntity.
Getting the in-world TileEntity for a delegate involves calling World.getBlockTileEntity() with the
delegate's world and xyz coordinate information.
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-- Multi Blocks --
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Multi blocks are a group of blocks which act as one functional entity.
The IMetaDelegate interface groups multiple TileEntity instances (=sub tiles) representing the
individual blocks to a single Energy Net relevant node. The sub tiles may be normal in-world or
delegate TileEntity instances.
The meta delegate is added to energy net once for the whole multi block structure and implements
the energy net interfaces as well. The sub tiles may optionally implement IEnergyEmitter and/or
IEnergyAcceptor to specify their connectivity rules independently, otherwise the meta delegate will
be queried.
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-- How to implement/add your own energy network --
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If you want to create an alternative way of distributing energy, e.g. to have different
distribution rules or to use energy networks provided by other mods, you can register to the energy
tile events and use the interfaces to handle the energy distribution yourself. It's no longer
required to use conversion blocks.
IC2's EnergyNet itself is built on top of the api events and interfaces, providing their default
use case.