Re: redfox's bgt questions?
To abstract it a bit, what you have now is like:
if (a and b) c;
if (a and d) e;
What you want instead is:
if (a) {
if (b) c;
else if (d) e;
}
Since both of your ifs start with the same condition, you can just make one if for that, then do the rest inside. The else just tells it to only do if (d) in the case where if (b) failed. Since you only want one of two options, this guarantees you only get one, and never both.
-- Audiogames-reflector mailing list Audiogames-reflector@sabahattin-gucukoglu.com https://sabahattin-gucukoglu.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/audiogames-reflector