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(1 edit)

It was only a few attacks, you can do a Ctrl + Shift + F for "is_reeling" and see which attacks incorrectly used that variable name.
As for updating projects, unfortunately there's no universal way to do that, it depends on which scripts you have changed in your project. You definitely want to use some kind of source control program like Github Desktop. If you haven't made too many changes yet, it would be easiest to make a local package of all your changes and then import them into the new version of PFE, but if you already made a lot of changes, it would be easiest to take the updated files from the new version of PFE and move them back to your project.

Just fyi, I think you meant to say which attacks are incorrectly using "is_reeling"  in your reply above (going by the devlog and the changes I see between the old and new versions).

For the github issue - the project I'm working on and basing on PFE is a fairly large one with a long development cycle and with multiple changes from base PFE. So the latter suggestion of taking the updated files from each new updated version of PFE and moving them back to my main project will have to be the go-to approach it seems, and which is what I'm doing now.

The concern with this approach is that I need to rely on your devlog to know which items need to be changed, and if something isn't sufficiently clear to me, I have to ask (as I've done twice with this update). BUT, fortunately, it seems that I can simply replace the GGMR folder entirely (I don't touch anything here), the attacks are not crucial items, and the extras seem like they will be self-explanatory in future updates. It's just the fixes in scripts that I'd need to watch for.

So my question is, can users use Github to merge changes you as the author made on your end, to their own project? This would streamline the updating issue above, but would require access of some sort to the source project, if I'm not mistaken. Again, just want to make sure as I didn't see anything related to this in the Github tutorial you made for PFE.

 

(+1)

I'm not a Github expert so I'm not entirely sure. I know that you can make a new repo, download the old version of PFE you based on the project on, commit, then download the new version of PFE, and that will show you all of the changes. But I don't know if there's a way to go from that to adding all the changes to the project. Maybe if you use a separate branch for it and then merge the branch back into main.