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Player Sets
A player set is a named subset of your players. The plugin uses player sets to display players and player counts in the tab list. Whenever you want to display a player count, or display players on the tab list the first step is to create a player set containing these players. In the following we will have a look at how to create player sets, and you will see various examples for useful player sets.
You can create a player set by editing the playerSets
section in the tab list configuration file.
A simple player set containing all players can be created like this:
playerSets:
all_players: all
The above line creates a playerSet called all_players
that contains all players.
Now you could use that player set to display the number of players on your server in the footer of the tab list:
footer: "&7Total players:&f ${playerset:all_players size}"
As you can see from the example the ${playerset:all_players size}
placeholder
is used to display the number of players in the player set. This works the
same for all player sets: The ${playerset:<name> size}
placeholders
displays the number of players in a particular player set.
Let's create a player set that only contains players on a specific server. For
this example it is assumed that there is a server called lobby
.
playerSets:
all_players: all
lobby: ${player server} == "lobby"
Now that isn't too difficult. Let's create a player set for a survival
server too:
playerSets:
all_players: all
lobby: ${player server} == "lobby"
survival: ${player server} == "survival"
Another common use case is a player set that contains all players on the same server as the person looking at the tab list.
Let's add a player set called same_server
that does exactly that.
playerSets:
all_players: all
lobby: ${player server} == "lobby"
survival: ${player server} == "survival"
same_server: ${player server} == ${viewer server}
Now a word on using Placeholders when creating a player
set. You usually want to use player
variant of the placeholder when creating
a condition that a player must fulfill to be part of the player set.
Last but not least we create a player set that contains all admins. For this
example all players in either that admin
or owner
permission group are
considered admins:
playerSets:
# ...
admins: ${player vault_primary_group} == "admin" or ${player vault_primary_group} == "owner"
To increase readability the complex definitions can be split up over multiple lines:
playerSets:
# ...
admins: |
${player vault_primary_group} == "admin"
or ${player vault_primary_group} == "owner"
You could create a player set that contains all non-admins the same way, by listing all the groups, however a better way is to create a filter that says "everyone except admins" by replacing ==
with !=
and or
with and
.
playerSets:
# ...
admins: |
${player vault_primary_group} == "admin"
or ${player vault_primary_group} == "owner"
non_admins: |
${player vault_primary_group} != "admin"
and ${player vault_primary_group} != "owner"
An alternative to identifying admins by their group is to give them a specific permission.
For the purpose of this example we assume that all staff member have the tablist.staff
permission.
Then we can create a player set containing all staff members, and a player set containing all player which are not staff by querying that permission:
playerSets:
# ...
staff: ${player permission tablist.staff} = true
non_staff: ${player permission tablist.staff} = false
Here are some more examples for player sets:
playerSets:
# Player set containing all players on a specific server and world:
survival_nether: |
${player server} == "survival"
and ${player world} == "world_nether"
# This player set contains players on three different servers
minigames: |
${player server} == "kitpvp"
or ${player server} == "bedwars"
or ${player server} == "survivalgames"
same_server: ${player server} == ${viewer server}
other_server: ${player server} != ${viewer server}
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