地區模改

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(重新導向自State modding

States (and their history) are defined in /Hearts of Iron IV/history/states/*.txt files. While it is typical to reserve one file to a state, that is not necessary. Unlike, for example, /Hearts of Iron IV/history/countries/, the filename does not get read in how the file should be handled, only its contents do. For that reason, unless a replace_path is defined to the folder, it should be avoided to change the filenames of already-existing files, as this can make it so that both the base game and the mod's state files will get read.

Arguments

Each state is contained within a state = { ... } block that must encompass everything. These are the arguments that can be used.

Mandatory

id = 123 is the ID number of the state. It must be an integer.
State IDs have to follow a numerical order, starting from 1: the game will expect every number between 1 and the largest state ID within the mod to be a state. If that expectation is not met, the game will crash when loading the game if the debug mode is not turned on, as the map is deemed too erroneous to be played normally.
As such, when deleting a state, the state IDs have to be shifted in order respectively, such as by changing the last state's ID to fit the now-missing ID. When doing that, everything that referenced the now-different state IDs will have to be adjusted, and searching every text file in the mod using a text editor can be used to do so.

name = STATE_123 is a localisation key that will become the name of the state, depending on which language is turned on. For English, this gets defined in any /Hearts of Iron IV/localisation/english/*_l_english.yml file as such:

l_english:
 STATE_123: "My state name"

By default, the game uses state_names_l_english.yml.

manpower = 500000 is the total population of the state at the game's start, both recruitable and non-recruitable. This will be the starting population on every scenario, without population growth being simulated between the first start date and the scenario's beginning. However, a single tick of monthly population growth will be done for each scenario, increasing the state's population by 表達式錯誤:未預料的<操作符。%.[1]

state_category = my_category is the category that the state uses. This sets the state modifiers that the state starts with (Including the amount of starting unlocked shared building slots), as well as assigning a colour to the state in the state view map mode. Details on the state categories are covered later in the article.

provinces = { 123 456 7890 } is the list of provinces that are defined as belonging to the state, separated with whitespace characters.

Optional

impassable = yes, if added in the state, will mark it as impassable. This includes making troops unable to enter it; its provinces going to the controller of the nearest passable provinces; making it impossible to build provincial buildings within it; marking it as true for the impassable trigger.

resources = { steel = 10 aluminium = 20 } assigns resources to the state. Each resource is added in the format of <resource> = <int>. Base game resources include oil, aluminium (With the spelling used in British English), rubber, tungsten, steel, and chromium, although more can be added.

local_supplies = 8.3 decides the base supply of the state. One unit of local_supplies is equal to 0.2 units of supply. If undefined, assumed to be 0.

buildings_max_level_factor = 0.5 adds an additional multiplier on the amount of unlocked shared building slots. Recommended to avoid, instead using state categories.

History

All of these are contained within history = { ... }, which is defined within the state. Additionally, these can be used within a YYYY.MM.DD-formatted datestamp inside of history, such as 1939.1.1 = { ... }. This will make them be executed only if the start date is strictly after the specified date.

owner = POL defines the initial owner of the state. If a state does not have an owner, the game will run without issues; however, executing nearly any effect on that state, such as transferring it to a country, will crash the game.

controller = LIT defines the initial controller of the state. Optional to define - only necessary if the owner differs from the controller.

victory_points = { 1234 10 } defines the amount of victory points on a specified province, where the first number is the province and the second number is the amount of victory points. Only one province can be defined within one victory_points. In order to have multiple provinces with victory points in one state, several instances of victory_points = { ... } need to be put in.
The localisation key that gets used for the victory point depending on the language of the game is VICTORY_POINTS_1234, where 1234 is the ID of the province. For English, this gets defined in any /Hearts of Iron IV/localisation/english/*_l_english.yml file as such:

l_english:
 VICTORY_POINTS_1234: "My city name"

By default, the game uses victory_points_l_english.yml. For positioning the icon of a victory point on the map, the unitstacks file is edited. Note that the icon of a victory point doesn't have to be inside of the province itself: if several victory points show up in the same place, it could be from different provinces with an outdated unitstacks file, which would need to be adjusted in the Nudge's Units section accordingly.

buildings = { ... } defines the initial buildings that the state has. A single building entry consists of the the ID of the building followed by its amount after an equality sign as dockyard = 10. Within buildings = { ... }, it is also possible to specify a province by using 1234 = { ... } and putting the province's buildings within, where 1234 is the province's ID. An example definition of buildings that uses this:

buildings = {
    dockyard = 10
    1234 = {
        bunker = 5
        coastal_bunker = 6
    }
}

If a building is not mentioned, it does not change the initial value, which is 0 by default; however, the initial building level may be different if the buildings block is within a datestamp rather than being executed immediately. In landlocked states, buildings that can only be built on coastal states/provinces cannot be defined, even if set to 0.

Additionally, history serves as an effect block. Common effects to use within state history include add_core_of = POL or add_claim_by = LIT, but any effect can be used.

Examples

Bare minimum:

state = {
    id = 123
    name = STATE_123
    manpower = 50000
    state_category = large_town
    
    history = {
        owner = ITA
    }
    
    provinces = {
        1234 5678
    }
}

Average state:

state = {
    id = 124
    name = STATE_124
    manpower = 50035
    state_category = megalopolis
    
    resources = {
        oil = 10
        chromium = 50
    }
    
    history = {
        owner = SWI
        add_core_of = SWI
        buildings = {
            infrastructure = 3
            industrial_complex = 1
            arms_factory = 1
            dockyard = 10
            7777 = {
                coastal_bunker = 5
                naval_base = 10
            }
        }
        victory_points = { 5555 15 }
        victory_points = { 6666 10 }
        1939.1.1 = {
            controller = ITA
            set_state_name = ITA_STATE_124
            buildings = {
                infrastructure = 4  # This will not change the amount of civilian or military factories.
            }
        }
    }
    
    provinces = { 1111 2222 3333 4444 5555 6666 7777 8888 9999 }
    
    local_supplies = 10
}

Notes

The building model positions for each state are defined separately from the states themselves, instead being defined in /Hearts of Iron IV/map/buildings.txt. A mismatch will cause errors, taking up space in the log and potentially crashes. For example, if a province is lacking a definition for a naval base or a floating harbour within a province, whether it's set in the wrong state in the buildings.txt file or missing entirely, attempting to use one within that province (whether by the player or the AI) will cause a crash, marked with the last read script being client_ping. The simplest way to compile the positions of models is to use the building section in the nudger.
/Hearts of Iron IV/map/airports.txt and /Hearts of Iron IV/map/rocketsites.txt decide in which province in the state the game should put airports or rocket sites. This is also edited in the building section in the nudger. If either is incorrect or missing, the game will not be possible to open without debug mode.

The state borders must follow strategic regions, defined in /Hearts of Iron IV/map/strategicregions/*.txt. If one province in the state belongs to one strategic region, while a different province in the same state belongs to a different strategic region, a map error will be created, which will cause a game crash on launch if the debug mode is not turned on. Make sure that strategic region borders are followed, either by adjusting the state or the strategic regions.

Using the nudger

Parts of this section are transcluded from Nudger § States

The nudger is a map editing tool, accessed through the main menu with the -debug launch option enabled. For the states, it can be used in order to change the borders of states and in order to generate the building models.

The state section of the nudger is used for defining the borders and names of states. Any state border changes will also automatically change the borders of the strategic regions that cover the states, taking provinces out of strategic regions completely for new states. Within the user directory, this edits the /Hearts of Iron IV/history/states/ and /Hearts of Iron IV/map/strategicregions/ folders and the /Hearts of Iron IV/localisation/english/state_names_l_english.yml file (for the English language).
The nudger will remove quotation marks from the state file, aside from the name attribute. This can break the rest of the script that's located inside of them. Most commonly, this will break any has_dlc checks, which will result in the entirety of the state breaking thereafter.
The nudger interprets version number–less localisation values as having a version of -1, and writes that in the output. As the game only expects numeric values in the version number, this will break the localisation after that point, with an error of the Expected quotation mark (") at line 113 and column 16 in ... sort.

Clicking onto a province is used to select a province. After a province is selected, ⇧Shift-clicking onto a province causes the following behaviour, depending on the selected and clicked provinces:

  • If the selected provinces are in a state and the shift-clicked province is in a different state or none at all, the game will adjust the borders of the state and the strategic regions to cover the shift-clicked province. It will also be selected.
    • If the shift-clicked province isn't in any state, it will be added to the state's strategic region without checking if it's already in one. This may cause the province to be defined twice in the same strategic region or be defined in two different strategic regions. This has to be fixed manually.
  • If the selected provinces are in a state and the shift-clicked province is in the same state, it will be removed from the state and the strategic region without being selected. The same happens if the selected provinces aren't in any state.
  • If the selected provinces and the shift-clicked province are both not in any state, it will get added to the selection.
  • If the shift-clicked province is already selected, it will get removed from the selection and, if it's in one, the state it's currently in.

If a province or several not in any state are selected, it is possible to create a state. That requires entering a state name into the textbox and selecting "Create state".

  • The state name must only contain ASCII characters that are possible to use in filenames. If there are any characters that aren't in ASCII, such as diacritics or non-Latin script, the game will crash to desktop instead of creating the state, but it will be able to remove the provinces from the old state first and save the changes there. Characters that are impossible to use in filenames include, on Windows, \ / : * " < > |.
  • Creating a new state (and occasionally editing state borders) requires changing the building model positions and airport/rocket launch site locations to avoid crashes.

If the selected province(s) are in a state, it is possible to select "Open file" or "Delete state":

  • Opening the file will use the default text editor for .txt files to open the file of the state in the user directory. If the user directory doesn't contain the file, a copy will be created. This copy doesn't contain the changes made in the nudger and instead will have those that were loaded into the memory when the files were last fetched (by opening the game, with "Update", or with "Save"). If the button is used and the file's version in the user directory is deleted, the button will do nothing until the next fetch of state files.
  • "Delete state" will not necessarily delete the state, but instead remove the file from the user directory (if it exists) and unload from memory all changes that were made to it in the nudger. This will also cause the game to try reading the state files related to the state ID: if the loaded files contain a state with the same ID, it will get used for the state's information, otherwise it will be deleted.

Among the buttons that can always be selected, there are "Delete all empty" and "Find collision".

  • "Delete all empty" works similarly to deleting an individual state: it checks for all provinces that have no provinces in memory (taking unsaved changes into consideration). If it finds any, the state gets deleted from memory and the user directory. Afterwards, the game will try finding a file to use as the new state information for each of the deleted states.
  • "Find collision" detects provinces that are located in several states at the same time. When pressed, it will move the player's camera to one of such provinces and give a selection of which state it must remain in; upon making a choice, it will be removed from every other state.

"Update" is used to disregard all unsaved changes and re-read the state files among the loaded files. If the state borders were manually changed, such as by moving the outputs into the mod files from the user directory, this is necessary to load them without restarting the game.
"Save" is used to write all changes to the user directory. Upon doing so, the changes will be purged from memory and the game will re-read the state files among the loaded files. If the state files in the user directory are overwritten or unloaded by mod files, it will appear that (some of) the changes will instantly revert, however they'll still be present in the user directory. This will require moving the files into the mod's files and updating the state of the game with "Update". Only the files since the last fetching of files will be created or changed within the user directory after saving.

Buildings


Building types

主條目:Building modding

These are the different types of buildings in the game as of 1.11 (Can also be found inside /Hearts of Iron IV/common/buildings/00_buildings.txt):

Icon Localised name Internal name Maximum level Type
Infrastructure.png Infrastructure infrastructure 5 Non-shared
Military factory.png Military factory arms_factory 20 Shared
Civilian factory.png Civilian factory industrial_complex 20 Shared
Air base.png Air base air_base 10 Non-shared
Supply hub.png Supply hub supply_node 1 Provincial
Railway.png Railway rail_way 5 Provincial
Land fort.png Land fort bunker 10 Provincial
Coastal fort.png Coastal fort coastal_bunker 10 Provincial
Naval dockyard.png Naval dockyard dockyard 20 Shared
Anti-air (building).png Anti-air anti_air_building 5 Non-shared
Synthetic refinery.png Synthetic refinery synthetic_refinery 3 Shared
Fuel silo.png Fuel silo fuel_silo 15 Shared
Radar station.png Radar station radar_station 6 Non-shared
Rocket site.png Rocket site rocket_site 2 Non-shared
Nuclear reactor.png Nuclear reactor nuclear_reactor 1 Non-shared

Note that while railways and supply nodes are buildings, not all traditional building operations apply to them. Their starting level is defined outside of state history and a separate effect must be used to construct railways mid-game, with the default add_building_construction or other building-related effects crashing the game.

State categories

The base game state categories and their corresponding number of building slots:

Localised name Internal name Amount of slots Color
Wasteland wasteland 0
Enclave enclave 0
Tiny island tiny_island 0
Pastoral region pastoral 1
Small island small_island 1
Rural region rural 2
Developed Rural Region town 4
Sparse Urban Region large_town 5
Urban Region city 6
Dense Urban Region large_city 8
Metropolis Region metropolis 10
Megalopolis Region megalopolis 12

State categories can be added in /Hearts of Iron IV/common/state_category/*.txt files. Each state category is contained within the state_categories = { ... }, as a code block with the name of the state category's ID.

A state category is a modifier block, where any state-scoped modifier can be used. The only modifier that the base game uses is local_building_slots, set to an integer, but any can be used. Additionally, the color = { 0 0 255 } block corresponds to the state's colour in the state map mode. It is defined in the RGB format, where each value is an integer on the scale from 0 to 255.

Example:

state_categories={
    my_state_category = {
        color = { 0 255 0 }
        local_building_slots = 14
    }
    my_second_category = {
        color = { 255 0 0 }
        local_building_slots = 4
        resistance_growth = 0.1
    }
}

The set_state_category = category_id effect can be used to change the state category of a state mid-game.

  1. NDefines.NCountry.POPULATION_YEARLY_GROWTH_BASE = 0.015