titleText: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Lou Montana (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "<dl class="command_description"> <dd class="notedate">" to "<dl class="command_description"> <dt></dt> <dd class="notedate">") |
Lou Montana (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - " <!-- (DIS)?CONTINUE Notes -->" to "") |
||
Line 40: | Line 40: | ||
{{GameCategory|tkoh|Scripting Commands}} | {{GameCategory|tkoh|Scripting Commands}} | ||
<dl class="command_description"> | <dl class="command_description"> | ||
<dt></dt> | <dt></dt> | ||
Line 53: | Line 52: | ||
</dd> | </dd> | ||
</dl> | </dl> | ||
Revision as of 00:55, 6 April 2021
Description
- Description:
- Description needed
- Groups:
- GUI Control
Syntax
- Syntax:
- Syntax needed
- Parameters:
- [text, type, speed, showInMap, isStructuredText]: Array
- text: String - text to be displayed
- type: String one of "PLAIN", "PLAIN DOWN", "BLACK", "BLACK FADED", "BLACK OUT", "BLACK IN", "WHITE OUT" and "WHITE IN". See Title Effect Types for more information about these values.
- speed (Optional): Number - Time in seconds to fade in resource. Default: -1
- showInMap (Optional): Boolean - false to hide the text when the map is opened. Default: true
- isStructuredText (Optional): Boolean - true to switch support for Structured Text formatting. Default: false (See Example 3. Available since Arma 3 v1.74)
- Return Value:
- Return value needed
Examples
- Example 1:
titleText ["Show this text", "PLAIN"];
- Example 2:
titleText ["Your message", "BLACK", 2];
- Example 3:
- Since Arma 3 v1.74:
titleText ["<t color='#ff0000' size='5'>RED ALERT!</t><br/>***********", "PLAIN", -1, true, true];
Additional Information
Notes
-
Report bugs on the Feedback Tracker and/or discuss them on the Arma Discord or on the Forums.
Only post proven facts here! Add Note
- Posted on November 21, 2014 - 09:03 (UTC)
- DreadedEntity
-
The third parameter or 'speed', as it is called in the description, refers to the amount of time the message will be shown on-screen. Multiply each number by 10 to get the number of seconds it will be shown. You can even use floats as input, like 0.1, to show a message for only 1 second.
Note: Calculating the time with that method does not include the time it takes to fade in/out, which is about 1 second unless you use numbers lower than 1.
Note: Using anything lower than 0.001 seems to have no effect, or the effect is so little it is negligible.
(A3 1.34.128075)