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Merge remote-tracking branch 'cramal/master'

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Marc Zinnschlag 2015-05-23 09:45:08 +02:00
commit c64e96e551
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@ -9,8 +9,8 @@ Let's go through all Record Types and discuss what you can tell OpenCS about the
\item[Activator:] When the player enters the same cell as this object, a script is started. Often it also has a \textbf{Script} attached to it, though it not mandatory. These scripts are small bits of code written in a special scripting language that OpenCS can read and interpret.
\item[Potion:] This is a potion that is not self-made. It has an \textbf{Icon} for your inventory, Aside from the self-explanatory \textbf{Weight} and \textbf{Coin Value}, it has an attribute called \textbf{Auto Calc} set to ``False''. This means that the effects of this potion are preconfigured. This does not happen when the player makes their own potion.
\item[Apparatus:] This is a tool to make potions. Again there's an icon for your inventory as well as a weight and a coin value. It also has a \textbf{Quality} value attached to it: higher the number, the better the effect on your potions will be. The \textbf{Apparatus Type} describes if the item is a Calcinator, Retort, Alembir or Mortar & Pestal. Each has a different effect on the potion the player makes. For more information on this subject, please refer to the \href{http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Morrowind:Alchemy#Tools}{UESP page on Alchemy Tools}.
\item[Armor:] This type of item adds \textbf{Enchantment Points} to the mix. Every piece of clothing or armor has a ''pool'' of potential magicka that gets unlocked when you enchant it. Strong enchantments consume more magicka from this pool: the stronger the enchantment, the more Enchantment Points each cast will take up. For more information on this subject, please refer to the \href{Enchant page on UESP}{http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Morrowind:Enchant}. \textbf{Health} means the amount of hit points this piece of armor has. If it sustains enough damage, the armor will be destroyed. Finally, \textbf{Armor Value} tells the game how much points to add to the player character's Armor Rating.
\item[Book:] This includes scrolls and notes. For the game to make the distinction between books and scrolls, an extra property, \textbf{Scroll}, has been added. Under the \textbf{Skill} column a scroll or book can have an in-game skill listed. Reading this item will raise the player's level in that specific skill. For more information on this, please refer to the \href{Skill Books page on UESP}{http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Morrowind:Skill_Books}.
\item[Armor:] This type of item adds \textbf{Enchantment Points} to the mix. Every piece of clothing or armor has a ''pool'' of potential magicka that gets unlocked when you enchant it. Strong enchantments consume more magicka from this pool: the stronger the enchantment, the more Enchantment Points each cast will take up. For more information on this subject, please refer to the \href{http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Morrowind:Enchant}{Enchant page on UESP}. \textbf{Health} means the amount of hit points this piece of armor has. If it sustains enough damage, the armor will be destroyed. Finally, \textbf{Armor Value} tells the game how much points to add to the player character's Armor Rating.
\item[Book:] This includes scrolls and notes. For the game to make the distinction between books and scrolls, an extra property, \textbf{Scroll}, has been added. Under the \textbf{Skill} column a scroll or book can have an in-game skill listed. Reading this item will raise the player's level in that specific skill. For more information on this, please refer to the \href{http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Morrowind:Skill_Books}{Skill Books page on UESP}.
\item[Clothing:] These items work just like Armors, but confer no protective properties. Rather than ``Armor Type'', these items have a ``Clothing Type''.
\item[Container:] This is all the stuff that stores items, from chests to sacks to plants. Its \textbf{Capacity} shows how much stuff you can put in the container. You can compare it to the maximum allowed load a player character can carry (who will get over-encumbered and unable to move if he crosses this threshold). A container, however, will just refuse to take the item in question when it gets ''over-encumbered''. \textbf{Organic Container}s are containers such as plants. Containers that \textbf{Respawn} are not safe to store stuff in. After a certain amount of time they will reset to their default contents, meaning that everything in it is gone forever.
\item[Creature:] These can be monsters, animals and the like.

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@ -92,5 +92,3 @@ when you hover your reticle over the object.
This is a library of all the items, triggers, containers, NPCs, etc. in the game. There are several kinds of Record Types. Depending on which type a record is, it will need specific information to function. For example, an NPC needs a value attached to its aggression level. A chest, of course, does not. All Record Types contain at least a model. How else would the player see them? Usually they also have a Name, which is what you see when you hover your reticle over the object.
Please refer to the Record Types section for an overview of what each type of Referenceable does and what you can tell OpenCS about these objects.
\end{description}