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Text Editor Created In Minecraft

jones_supa writes: The redstone mechanics in Minecraft can be pushed surprisingly far to create rather advanced digital circuits. Thanks to a user nicknamed Koala_Steamed, there now exists a text editor inside the game (YouTube demonstration). It comes with a 5 x 10 character matrix in which each character uses a starburst (16-segment) display. There are 7.357 x 10^92 different combinations the screen can show, all of which can be controlled from a single line. The scale of the workings used to make this piece of logic, using only redstone, is dauntingly huge.

11 of 114 comments (clear)

  1. the whole things an editor if you're brave enough by nimbius · · Score: 4, Funny

    I know it may not be the most efficient thing in the world, but its entirely possibly to write your term papers in Minecraft over the span of about 6 months to a year if you stick to harvesting wool to create a "paper" substrate and creating coal blocks for pixels. Presuming you make it long enough to avoid any creepers, the paper can be read from an enormous glass skybridge you construct over the next 2 weeks, and should only take 4 weeks to completely read, give or take a few days to a week if you fall from it a few times or if endermen start stealing text.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  2. Most important question of all by NotInHere · · Score: 5, Funny

    does it support vi or emacs commands?

    1. Re:Most important question of all by ComputerGeek01 · · Score: 5, Funny

      On behalf of Systems Administrators everywhere; I will personally bitch slap the first user that tries to tell me that their preferred emacs interpreter is Minecraft.

    2. Re:Most important question of all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I personally use Emacs as my preferred Minecraft interpreter.

  3. Next thing you know by Marginal+Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Next thing you know, Minecraft will be self-hosting. Lord help us, the singularity awakes!

    1. Re:Next thing you know by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 4, Informative
      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  4. Re:This isn't pure minecraft by MadCow42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He serializes the data and sends it over a single redstone line... just like you would do in a real computer.

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    I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
  5. Re:This isn't pure minecraft by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He serializes the data and sends it over a single redstone line... just like you would do in a real computer.

    It's actually rather interesting. I think firstly the keyboard generates serial pulses directly, with the pulses encoded with redstone repeaters. This is a very nice solution to keyboard decoding. Secondly, minecraft is a lot slower than the real world so high speed problems crop up early. Routing 8 parallel wires would be a real pain and you'd start to get clock skew problems if you weren't really careful about keeping the path lengths the same.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  6. Re:Cool, but why? by Psychotria · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Obviously a talented individual, think of that useful software could have been written with the same amount of time and effort.

    I've been asked this question all my life.

    When I decided I'd like to fly to the moon everyone asked why. "You could have spent your time and effort making a ship to fly to Australia," they said.

    The time that I decided I'd like to write a series of novels that spanned generations of characters and several hundred years they said asked why as well. "Your time is better spent writing non-fiction and and historic account of something that really happened."

    I remember one time when I decided to ride my bike to the other side of town. My grandfather said "Why? The bus is faster and you'll be less tired."

    Sometimes I take a break from work. My co-workers ask me why when work is so rewarding anyway.

    The other day I spent a crazy amount of money buying ingredients to make a very tasty meal (well, I thought it was). I was asked why. It provided my body the same energy as something I could have made using much cheaper ingredients.

    Related to the above item, many of my friends ask me why I cook my own meals at all. If you look hard enough you can get someone else to cook something kind of similar for about the same cost.

    I once decided to make my own analogue clock. I made all the gears and built it from scratch. Took ages. Cost a lot more than an analogue clock I could have purchased (and certainly a lot more than a digital clock).

    Sometimes I do crosswords or solve other puzzles.

    Even more occasionally I listen to music.

    I go bushwalking (I am not sure of the American term -- walking in National Parks along trails?) and camping.

    I could go on forever and for ever.

    I don't need to do any of these things. I enjoy doing these things. I want to do these things. Most of them serve no practical purpose at all, apart from making me happy. That's not entirely true, though. If I set myself a goal that has no practical or useful purpose and achieve it I do get a reward. I even get a reward if I fail.

    There is no purpose to life apart from being happy (IMO). And if doing something meaningless makes you happy then... then, well it's not meaningless is it?

  7. Re:Cool, but why? by Psychotria · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I meant to add...

    When I am laying on my death bed and someone says "you did all these useless things -- you could have directed your talent towards really useful stuff and made lots of money", I will honestly be able to say "They were not useless; they made me happy. And that is what gave my life meaning."

  8. Re:the whole things an editor if you're brave enou by BForrester · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I agree entirely with the sentiment, but there is a massive psychological difference between virtual problems and real ones.

    With virtual problems, the rules are known and consistent, and the only potential barrier to success is the limitations of the user's abilities. If the user can accurately assess their own skill level, they can know if the problem is solvable, and possibly the time frame in which this can be done.

    Big, real problems are awash in variables far beyond the control of any one person. They may not be solvable given current restraints. Many of the "best" governments in the world, led by the most educated and intelligent people, and backed with enormous budgets are undercut by the chaos of global economics, damaged by misinformation and false intelligence, aggravated by the stupidity of other actors, and in turn conduct their own activities that damage the prospects of peace, or health and security for all.

    I might commit my life to a cure for cancer or world peace, and thus squander the next 60 years away because the world, as a majority, is not ready for those things. The Sudoku puzzle, on the other hand, I can solve before I finish breakfast.