yeah but that's not exactly what i mean..... i am asking for the spaces one has to change to choose wich neighbor it is....
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yeah but that's not exactly what i mean..... i am asking for the spaces one has to change to choose wich neighbor it is....
Maybe if you describe it right and actually spell "which" right we may be able to give the correct code you want...
Oh I am really so sorry for writing which wrong... I guess it somehow just slipped my mind... Do you maybe know how? I somehow forgot it, for some unusual reason.... It fell out of my ears I guess... Nope, just slipped my mind....I seriously have no idea how..... I'm so sorry! I'm still wondering how I just COULD write it wrong! Uh oh.... I think my brain is too small for this and I'm getting all confused! Oh yeah, I think I by accident hammered a nail in there! Oh well.... Sorry again! Oh... Maybe I should go write it 20 times on a paper by hand :roll: lol.
So I will ask again:
Which part in the "All neighbors are Nook" -code says Which neighbor it is?
Thank you very much in advance
WERE IS THE CODE?
-_-Quote:
Originally Posted by Area51_Hacker2
it's only a few posts back
it doesn't matter though, because I see nowhere in the code that writes just XXXX to any address...Quote:
Originally Posted by oxagento
in fact this code says that if 0x020D90D0 is equal to 2F63706E then it needs to change 0x020D90D0 to 5f63706e 6d2f7073 6c65646f 6e63722f 62736e2e 0000646d
which is XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXXXX
so I think you'd have trouble with a code to do just XXXX, unless I'm completely wrong
Code:Extracted from the G-H wiki:
Type 0x0E
Type E is technically explained like this:
EXXXXXXX NNNNNNNN
VVVVVVVV VVVVVVVV
X = Offset
N = Number of bytes you want to write at the offset
V = The values you want written at the offset
Yeah yeah, confusing. Here's an example of an E type code I wrote.
E20E2270 00000010
65435347 6172746E
6146206C 00736C69
This code writes 16 bytes (00000010, 16 = 10 in hex) to the offset 0x020E2270. The following 2 lines are the 16 bytes. Type 0x0E is used to do a larger write then 8, 16, and 32-bit.
None of it >_>Quote:
Originally Posted by mysteriousmrl
is there a code for a banana tree??
xD. Look what I started...Quote:
Originally Posted by joanneg1980
oh god >_>