Book Image

Building Minecraft Server Modifications - Second Edition

By : Cody M. Sommer
4 (1)
Book Image

Building Minecraft Server Modifications - Second Edition

4 (1)
By: Cody M. Sommer

Overview of this book

Minecraft is a sandbox game that allows you to play it in any way you want. Coupled with a multiplayer server powered by Spigot, you can customize the game even more! Using the Bukkit API, anyone interested in learning how to program can control their Minecraft world by developing server plugins. This book is a great introduction to software development through the wonderful world of Minecraft. We start by instructing you through how to set up your home PC for Minecraft server development. This includes an IDE complete with the required libraries as well as a Spigot server to test on. You will be guided through writing code for several different plugins. Each chapter teaches you new skills to create plugins of increasing complexity, and each plugin adds a new concept of the Bukkit API By the end of the book, you will have all the knowledge you need about the API to successfully create any type of plugin. You can then practice and build your Java skills through developing more mods for their server.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Building Minecraft Server Modifications Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

About the Reviewers

Thomas E. Enebo is the co-leader of the JRuby project and author of the Minecraft plugin project, Purugin. He has been a practioner of Java since the heady days of the HotJava browser, and he has happily been using Ruby since 2001. Thomas has spoken at many Java and Ruby conferences, co-authored Using JRuby, and won the Ruby Hero award. He was awarded the "Rock Star" award at JavaOne. When Thomas is not coding, he enjoys jogging, reading, and drinking a nice India pale ale (IPA).

Pat Patterson has been working with Internet technologies since 1997. He has built software and worked with developer communities at Sun Microsystems, Huawei Technologies, and Salesforce. At Sun, Pat was best known as the community lead for the OpenSSO open source project. At Huawei, he worked on cloud storage infrastructure software.

Since joining the developer evangelism team at Salesforce in late 2010, Pat has worked with all aspects of what is now the Salesforce App Cloud, developing a focus on identity, integration, and the Internet of Things. Describing himself as an "articulate techie", Pat has coded everything from Linux kernel drivers to a Salesforce/Minecraft integration (seriously, you can Google it!), written many online articles, and spoken at conferences on five continents.