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  1. You could get the coords and use math and a distance formula. Or you could execute facing @p raycast and count each raycast "jump"

  2. 29 maj 2017 · You can do this in 1.13+ now, with the /execute store command. The steps are as follows: store player coordinates > calculate the differences > square the differences > sum up > calculate the sqrt values. I'm using euclidean distance as the metric. 1.

  3. Marking distance. Distances in Minecraft are quite easy to measure. Officially, [1] Minecraft uses the metric system, and each block is considered to be 1 cubic meter. When you measure long distances, it's easier to count if you mark the terrain with a space of 4 blocks between each marked block.

  4. It'll be difficult to manually kill them all, and I also don't want to kill all parrots on the server with a generic command. It looks like the "r=" tag for radius has been replaced with "distance". So I test it out by typing "/kill @e [type=parrot,distance=50" and it says no entity was found.

  5. You can use execute store result ... run data get entity @s ..., to get the players's position in each axis, found in the Pos[x,y,z] data tag. If you store the target's coordinates and your coordinates in different scores, you can use subtraction using scoreboard players operation to find the distance along each axis.

  6. The command /execute if @p[distance=..2] will test to see if any players are within a range of 2 (the command block itself plus 2 more blocks in every direction). Range 2 is the range a player want for a command block under a floor.

  7. If you want it to apply to players within 3, change it to [distance=..3] And if you want it to be between 2 numbers, use [distance=x..y] And if you want it to be 3 or more use [distance=3..] Make sure you change it to [distance=..3] this gets me all the time but its really important so never forget those 2 dots. i tried to make command block ...

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