Arqade Asked on April 18, 2021
I’m pretty new to NBT tags so there’s a good chance this is a simple mistake, but I’m trying to tell the nearest player the XYZ location of an arrow that has hit the ground, currently I’ve got this running in a repeating command block:
execute as @e[type=minecraft:arrow , nbt={inGround:1b}] run tellraw @p {"nbt" : "" , "entity" : "@e[type=minecraft:arrow , nbt=inGround:1b]"}
This just prints a blank message at me.
It would be good if after this prints a second command block then kills that arrow but I don’t even know where to begin with that.
Also, if anyone has any good resources on this topic, I would greatly appreciate it, there is very little good documentation that I’ve found.
I’m using Minecraft JE 1.16.
{}
s. You did this in the first part with /execute as
, but this needs also to be the same with the target selector in JSON text of the /tellraw
.nbt=inGround:1b
→ nbt={inGround:1b}
{"nbt":"Pos[0]"}
. Pos[0]
for X, Pos[1]
for Y, and Pos[2]
for Z.Pos
is an array of three numbers representing entity position.Fixed command (for X position):
execute as @e[type=minecraft:arrow , nbt={inGround:1b}] run tellraw @p [{"nbt":"Pos[0]","entity":"@e[type=minecraft:arrow,nbt={inGround:1b}]"}]
You don't need to use /execute
to switch the executing entity to the arrow. Running the /tellraw
from the command block will do just fine.
Command with suggestions applied:
tellraw @p [{"nbt":"Pos[0]","entity":"@e[type=minecraft:arrow,nbt={inGround:1b},limit=1]"}]
Your one stop go-to resource for all your Minecraft commands needs is the Minecraft Wiki. The MC Wiki includes lots of documentation on how raw JSON text format works, with useful information on commands, and technical info on how they work. I used this page as resource to compile this answer for you.
Correct answer by ExpertCoder14 on April 18, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Answers
Recent Questions
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP