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Posted

i would love, love to have a roofing slab with a 22.5 degree slope that can be placed just like normal slabs. that is all. it would make me so so happy.

while were at it, how about an eve/overhang roof block? doesn't need to be insulating, just a nice way to make roof overhangs and eves without the square block bottoms showing.

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Posted
31 minutes ago, Porkbrick said:

i would love, love to have a roofing slab with a 22.5 degree slope that can be placed just like normal slabs. that is all. it would make me so so happy.

while were at it, how about an eve/overhang roof block? doesn't need to be insulating, just a nice way to make roof overhangs and eves without the square block bottoms showing.

It might be not hundred percent what you are looking for, but https://mods.vintagestory.at/oneroof improves the roof building quite a bit.

Posted
37 minutes ago, Brady_The said:

It might be not hundred percent what you are looking for, but https://mods.vintagestory.at/oneroof improves the roof building quite a bit.

i did look at oneroof. i really like the eve overhang, and its awesome that it has the roof block that has a "universal" base material (base takes on whatever material its set on). unfortunately the shallow roof angle are only able to be made with 2 blocks side by side. i couldn't figure out how to fix the shape in place, so, adding another block changes the block next to it.

  • 11 months later...
Posted (edited)
On 10/7/2024 at 4:34 PM, Porkbrick said:

i would love, love to have a roofing slab with a 22.5 degree slope that can be placed just like normal slabs. that is all. it would make me so so happy.

while were at it, how about an eve/overhang roof block? doesn't need to be insulating, just a nice way to make roof overhangs and eves without the square block bottoms showing.

 

Agreed, with one correction:

26.57 degrees , is actually what you would want.  A slope with a ratio of 1:2 = 26.57 degrees.  I only say this because such intuition is common and can result in mistakes that are hard to debug.  I intuited the same a while back and embedded 22.5 degrees in code for physics for a game I was working on... That mathematical error sat in the code for a year before I realized my mistake and corrected it.

Edited by Ruskul
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