![]() Okay, from here onwards, we will work in Eclipse IDE, so open that. This will be the folder where you store your mod code. When done, you can go out of your forge folder into your modding folder, and make a new folder called “workspace”. This is a fairly long process, you’ll want to wait for a few minutes until the command terminates and “BUILD SUCCESSFUL” is shown in the command window. A command prompt will appear, enter the following: Inside the forge folder, hold shift and right click on the background, and select “Open command window here”. For clarity I will be naming mine “forge” for this tutorial, so now inside your modding folder, you have two folders, eclipse and forge. ![]() Extract this archive to a new folder in the modding folder you created earlier. You always want to get the latest version for modding. Download Forge SRC version (or MDK for newer versions) right here. Okay, now you need to download Forge itself. You should be left with an “eclipse” folder inside your root modding folder. Eclipse is released as a package, not an installer, so just extract it to a new folder, and you’re done. Eclipse is an IDE, which stands for Integrated Development Environment, which will aid in coding your mod. If you already have your PATH variable, and it is not empty, you can add a semicolon ( ), and then the new value.Īll done? Great. Click on Environment Variables, and on the System variables box, i.e. To do this, go to Control Panel -> System and Security -> System, and on the sidebar select Advanced system settings. Download the corresponding version to your computer, and then install it.Īfter installing that, you need to set your environment variables. ![]() To get Java Development Kit, you can go here. JDK is Java too, but added with stuff to help you develop your Java apps. You might be saying “Hey EMX, I already have Java, that’s what I use to play Minecraft!” Well, JDK and JRE are different. Seems good? Let’s start.įirst of all, you need to get JDK, Java Development Kit. This tutorial will be for the advanced version, which means you can make lots of different mods in one Eclipse workspace. In this tutorial I will be explaining how you can set up the Eclipse workspace and necessary dependencies to be able to start modding. With the new Gradle integrated Forge source, comes a new way to setting up your workspace.
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