Custom Recipes/1.16
Recipes are a core concept within the use of items. They allow you to transform some item into another through the use of crafting, smelting, smithing, etc. all of which can be defined in JSON through datapacks. However, the recipe system in its entirety is not only limited to what vanilla can provide. Any modder can create their own custom recipe implementation.
Creating a New Recipe
Creating a new recipe boils down to three things: IRecipe
, IRecipeType
, and IRecipeSerializer
.
For a general overview:
IRecipe
: The actual recipe implementation which handles the matching logic, construction logic, and the display data. All custom recipes need some implementation of this class.IRecipeType
: The category the recipe belongs to. For example, a recipe placed in the#CRAFTING
category is expected to work within the crafting table. A custom recipe category indicates that recipes of that type will be used in that particular context.IRecipeSerializer
: The serializer which handles decoding the data from JSON and handling the data when syncing across the network. Each serializer can serialize to oneIRecipe
implementation. Thetype
field within any recipe JSON references the registry name of this serializer.
How one uses the recipe and its data is up to the implementing modder.
Warning
IRecipe
IRecipe
is an interface which holds data about the recipe being represented and how to test whether it is valid. It has a single parameterized type of some IInventory
subtype. This is used to get a snapshot of the current inventory, and as such should only be read from in this class. In most cases, this can just be left as IInventory
.
The following methods must be implemented within your implementation:
Method | Description |
---|---|
getId | This method represents the unique name of the recipe. This usually refers to the name of the JSON file and is passed in while decoding. |
getSerializer | This method represents the serializer used to decode and send this recipe across the network. |
getType | This method represents the category the recipe is in. |
canCraftInDimensions | This takes in a width and height and checks whether the recipe can be created within those bounds. This is only used within the Recipe Book. |
matches | This method checks if the passed in inventory can craft using the recipe stored in this class. Using the standard RecipeManager interface, this is always used to check whether the recipe can be used.
|
assemble | This creates the resulting ItemStack to return to the player if the recipe has been crafted. This should always return a unique instance. If you are unsure whether yours does, call ItemStack#copy on the decoded result before returning.
|
getResultItem | This shows the resulting item in displays like the Recipe Book. This does not need to return a unique instance and usually represents the decoded result directly. |
Important
RecipeManager
methods yourself.There are some defaulted methods as well. Although optional, they will be covered as well:
Method | Description |
---|---|
getGroup | This gets the group the recipe is currently associated with. This is used by the Recipe Book to group similar recipes into one entry to reduce cluttering. This would be passed in from the decoded JSON. By default, this returns an empty string. |
getIngredients | This gets the ingredients of the recipe. This is once again used by the Recipe Book to display the ingredients of the recipe. These are usually the decoded Ingredient s from JSON. By default, this returns an empty list.
|
isSpecial | This usually signals that the recipe cannot purely be represented in JSON as it has some dynamic metadata preventing it from being so. Special recipes will not appear in the Recipe Book for this reason as they provide a number of combinations which cannot be simply expressed. By default, this is false. |
getToastSymbol | This returns the symbol that appears when the recipe is seen in a toast, usually from unlocking via an advancement. This is not the actual recipe output itself, but it signifies what the recipe was made within. By default this returns a crafting table stack. |
getRemainingItems | This returns what items remain in the inventory after the recipe has been created. By default, this will return a list of container items. |
When in practice, these will be decoded from an IRecipeSerializer
and stored in a map with a key of the IRecipeType
category it belongs to. The recipe itself is dynamically registered to the RecipeManager
for each decoded instance.
IRecipeType
IRecipeType
is another interface; however, it does not store any data itself. It is simply a non-forge wrapped registry object which represents the category the IRecipe
implementation belongs to. As such, it only needs to be supplied its registry name. This can be registered via IRecipeType#register
by either static initialization or deferring the registration until FMLCommonSetupEvent
.
Warning
#enqueueWork
since IRecipeType#register
is not threadsafe.IRecipeSerializer
IRecipeSerializer
is an interface which takes some JSON and transforms it into an IRecipe
. It is also responsible for syncing the recipe data to the client. This is a forge wrapped registry object; however, since it is an interface, there is a bit more work needed for ease of implementation. This is because IRecipeSerializer
extends IForgeRegistryEntry
which has three abstract methods. For ease of use, the implementation should extends ForgeRegistryEntry<IRecipeSerializer<?>>
such that you do not need to implement these methods yourself.
There are only three methods within IRecipeSerializer
, but they all must be implemented:
Method | Description |
---|---|
fromJson | This decodes an IRecipe from JSON. The ResourceLocation id is separated from the JSON object as it represents the file name and not data within the file.
|
toNetwork | This encodes an IRecipe on the server to send to the client. The data should be written to the PacketBuffer except for the id as that has already been written.
|
fromNetwork | This decodes an IRecipe on the client. Besides the id, the rest of the data can be read from the PacketBuffer in order of insertion.
|
Ingredient#fromJson
and CraftingHelper#getItemStack
.This can be registered like any other forge wrapped registry object. The registry name supplied will represent the type
supplied in the recipe JSON.
Once that is done, you can create a recipe JSON within data/<modid>/recipes/<path>.json
and set the type
field, along with any other data, to that handled by your serializer.
Data Generation
Custom recipes can also be generated by the RecipeProvider
or as your own implementation. For simplicity purposes, this will be addressed as if one was creating a recipe within RecipeProvider#buildShapelessRecipes
.
For a recipe to be consumed by the data provider, whatever builder that is implemented must result in an IFinishedRecipe
.
All finished recipes must implement the following methods:
Method | Description |
---|---|
getId | This gets the id of the recipe. When serialized, the recipe will be saved to data/<namespace>/recipes/<path>.json .
|
getType | This gets the IRecipeSerializer of the recipe. The registry name is set to the type field using this within #serializeRecipe .
|
serializeRecipeData | This encodes the data into the supplied JSON object. The data supplied should be the same as when needed to decode via the IRecipeSerializer . The type field does not need to be specified as that is already set before this method is called.
|
getAdvancementId | This gets the advancement id of the recipe. This will be saved to data/<namespace>/advancements/<path>.json . Usually the path contains recipes/ to represent it has a recipe and any other subdividing types like the ItemGroup . If unwanted, this should return null .
|
serializeAdvancement | This encodes the advancement data into a JSON. If working with an Advancement$Builder , this can be done simply by calling Advancement$Builder#serializeToJson . If unwanted, this should return null .
|
Once done, have the consumer accept the finished recipe.