![]() I hope this information was of use to you. The debug.log is attached below.Įverything does, however, function normally without the source implementation statement. As per se, when loading Minecraft with the implementation on, it shows an error stating that an unmapped Minecraft class has been attempted to be called. This heavily leads me to believe that Gradle (at least in VSCode) is responsible for handling this kind of stuff, but I'm simply not doing it properly. However, even if the implementation method is absolutely not intended for loading source files the fact is, it still did load them after I declared the statement. ![]() Thank you for the helpful article, too - however, their method is workspace-only, and does not apply to build tools such as Gradle. Other than that, I don't have much more details to share with you, as the rest is just the boilerplate adle. That being said, the mod and its sources are also hosted on GitHub. I don't know if it makes the difference, though. I've seen a similar issue here (#736) - However, theirs revolved around a hosted dependency, whereas mine is a local one. In there, the files genshinstrument-2.3.jar and are present - such that the mod and its sources are different jars. The mod that I am attempting to reference is a mod that is present in the libs directory: I believed this snippet was enough to determine the problem, but I was mistaken. I sincerely apologize for lacking more details. ![]() "name": "com.mojang:minecraft:1.14.Hey there. ![]() "name": "commons-logging:commons-logging:1.1.3 " "name": "commons-codec:commons-codec:1.10 " ![]()
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