Using FriendlyByteBuf/1.17
FriendlyByteBuf
s are essentially a byte array of zero or more bytes to sync information across a network. It works similarly to a queue: the information is written in to a specific order and read in the order it was written.
Using FriendlyByteBuf
s
In most cases, one will use a premade FriendlyByteBuf
passed in from some network. Most of the time this is a heap buffer of some sort; however, understanding how it works is best left as an explanation of data structures.
When you are writing to a FriendlyByteBuf
, you are calling one of the many write functions to store information as bytes (e.g. writeBlockPos
or writeVarInt
). There are a couple of helpers for objects like CompoundTag
, ItemStack
s, etc. if they are needed.
When you are reading from a FriendlyByteBuf
, you are calling the equivalent read function in the same order. For example, if you call writeBlockPos
and then writeVarInt
, you would call readBlockPos
and then readVarInt
in that order. Each of these method returns the value from the buffer.