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Welcome to Bukkit's Event API reference page.

Introduction[]

Events are how the CraftBukkit server tells your plugin that something has happened in the world. Bukkit defines many events, in multiple categories; e.g. player actions (player logged in, player clicked a block, player died, player respawned...), block events (block placed, block broken, block's neighbour changed...), entity events (a mob targeted you, a creeper exploded...), world-wide events (a world loaded or unloaded, a chunk loaded or unloaded), and many more. Due to unknown reasons there is no longer any links to official Javadocs as they have all been taken off line.

The Basics[]

To keep this section simple, we're going to only work with PlayerLoginEvent. Lets start with setting up the method

Setting up the Method[]

In order for your plugin to handle an event call, you need to create a method for it:

@EventHandler
public void onLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
    // Your code here...
}

Before this method can be invoked by Bukkit when the "PlayerLoginEvent" is fired, we need to annotate it. We do this with EventHandlers.

@EventHandler[]

The "@EventHandler" class is an Annotation, which goes just above your method. It looks like this:

@EventHandler // EventPriority.NORMAL by default

This marks your method as an EventHandler with the EventPriority as NORMAL.

The EventHandler can take an EventPriority to specify the priority of the method, like so:

@EventHandler(priority = EventPriority.HIGHEST) // Makes your method Highest priority
@EventHandler(priority = EventPriority.LOW) // Makes your method Low priority

Here's what it would look like in your class:

@EventHandler
public void onLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
    // Your code here...
}

Adding the listener[]

In order for Bukkit to be able to register your EventHandler's, the class which contains your event handling methods must implement the Listener (org.bukkit.event.Listener) interface, e.g.:

public final class MyPlayerListener implements Listener {
    @EventHandler
    public void onLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
        // Your code here...
    }
}

The name of the method (onLogin in the above example) does not matter; you may call the method anything you like inside your listener.

You may be wondering.. "How does Bukkit know which event to listen to?" It knows that by the event parameter you specify in the method's signature - in the above example: PlayerLoginEvent.

Lightbulb Note: You must specify a single specific event or Bukkit will not be able to register it

Your main plugin class (i.e. the class which extends JavaPlugin) can also be an event listener, and this might make sense if your plugin is very small. E.g.:

public class MyPlugin extends JavaPlugin implements Listener {
  @Override
  public void onEnable() {
    getServer().getPluginManager().registerEvents(this, this);
  }

  @EventHandler
  public void onLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
    getLogger().log(Level.INFO, "Player " + event.getPlayer().getName() + " is logging in!");
  }
}

EventHandler Parameters[]

The @EventHandler annotation can take parameters to further define how the event handler behaves. At the moment you can specify:

Name Type Default Description Values
priority EventPriority EventPriority.NORMAL Sets the priority of your method
  • EventPriority.MONITOR
  • EventPriority.HIGHEST
  • EventPriority.HIGH
  • EventPriority.NORMAL
  • EventPriority.LOW
  • EventPriority.LOWEST
ignoreCancelled boolean false If set to true, your method will not get the event if the event has been cancelled
  • true
  • false


Event Priorities[]

There are six priorities in Bukkit:

  • EventPriority.MONITOR
  • EventPriority.HIGHEST
  • EventPriority.HIGH
  • EventPriority.NORMAL
  • EventPriority.LOW
  • EventPriority.LOWEST

Every plugin gets a say in what happens, and every plugin must get a chance to know the outcome of an event. So, we pass events to plugins even after they've been cancelled. A plugin can actually uncancel an event after another plugin cancelled it. This is where priorities become really important. When changing values of an event the changes of one with the higher priority will override any changes done before by a listener with a lower priority so that in the end the one with the highest priority can have the final say in the actually outcome. To achieve this priority order listeners are called from the ones with the lowest to the ones with the highest priority. Any listener with the MONITOR priority is called last.

If you want to change the outcome of an event, choose very carefully from LOWEST to HIGHEST. Suggested generalized protection plugins on lowest, more specific plugins on normal, and override plugins on high.

If you want to act when an event happens, but not change the outcome, use MONITOR. It's really really important that you use MONITOR, or an event might get cancelled after you've acted on it, and it's even more important that you don't change the outcome of the event on MONITOR or it'll break other plugins.

Example with a BlockPlaceEvent[]

The lowest priority listener is called to get its say in whether it should be cancelled or not. Then the low priority listener is called to see if it wants to override the lowest, etc. Eventually it hits monitor, and at this point nothing should change the outcome of the event. Monitor should be used to see the outcome of an event, without changing any aspect of it. If we have three plugins enabled; one is a basic area protection plugin, one is a fancy plugin using signs, and another is a logging plugin. The protection plugin listens on EventPriority.LOWEST. It says they can't place blocks in this area, and cancels the event. The fancy sign plugin listens on EventPriority.NORMAL. It says they can place signs here, and uncancels the event. The log plugin listens on EventPriority.MONITOR. It sees that the event was actually allowed, and logs it.

Registering Events[]

To register your methods, the class containing the EventHandler(s) must implement the Listener interface.

import org.bukkit.event.Listener;

public final class LoginListener implements Listener {
}

You only need to provide a plugin and a listener to register them in the PluginManager.

getServer().getPluginManager().registerEvents(Listener, Plugin);

Example Listener[]

This listener contains two EventHandlers. One listening on HIGH, and one on NORMAL.

import org.bukkit.event.Listener;
import org.bukkit.event.EventHandler;
import org.bukkit.event.EventPriority;
import org.bukkit.event.player.PlayerLoginEvent;

public final class LoginListener implements Listener {
    @EventHandler
    public void normalLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
        // Some code here
    }

    @EventHandler(priority = EventPriority.HIGH)
    public void highLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
        // Some code here
    }
}

Registering Events in Plugin[]

The registerEvents method requires a listener and a plugin. Luckily, we already have our LoginListener. Now for the LoginPlugin!

import org.bukkit.plugin.java.JavaPlugin;

public final class LoginPlugin extends JavaPlugin {
    public void onEnable() {
        getServer().getPluginManager().registerEvents(new LoginListener(), this);
    }
}


Registering Events with Plugin as Listener[]

You could even have the events in the main class, for example:

import org.bukkit.plugin.java.JavaPlugin;
import org.bukkit.event.Listener;
import org.bukkit.event.EventHandler;
import org.bukkit.event.player.PlayerLoginEvent;

public final class LoginPlugin extends JavaPlugin implements Listener {
    public void onEnable() {
        getServer().getPluginManager().registerEvents(this, this);
    }

    @EventHandler
    public void normalLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
        // Some code here
    }
}

Registering Events in your Listener[]

There are many ways to register your events. Here's an example where you register them in your listener class.

import org.bukkit.event.Listener;
import org.bukkit.event.EventHandler;
import org.bukkit.event.EventPriority;
import org.bukkit.event.player.PlayerLoginEvent;

public final class LoginListener implements Listener {
    public LoginListener(LoginPlugin plugin) {
        plugin.getServer().getPluginManager().registerEvents(this, plugin);
    }

    @EventHandler
    public void normalLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
        // Some code here
    }

    @EventHandler(priority = EventPriority.HIGH)
    public void highLogin(PlayerLoginEvent event) {
        // Some code here
    }
}

The LoginPlugin would look like this:

import org.bukkit.plugin.java.JavaPlugin;

public final class LoginPlugin extends JavaPlugin {
    public void onEnable() {
        new LoginListener(this);
    }
}

Un-registering events or listeners[]

You can un-register individual events, entire listener classes or all events registered by your plugin or even by other plugins!

Un-register specific event[]

Each event class has the getHandlerList() static method, call that and then you can use .unregister() method. Example:

PlayerInteractEvent.getHandlerList().unregister(plugin);
// this will unregister all PlayerInteractEvent instances from the plugin
// you can also specify a listener class instead of plugin.

Now you know why you'll need the getHandlerList() in your custom events.

Un-register all events[]

Using the HandlerList class and its unregisterAll() static method you can easily unregister events from listener classes or plugins. Example:

HandlerList.unregisterAll(plugin);
// this will unregister all events from the specified plugin
// you can also specify a listener class instead of plugin.

Creating Custom Events[]

Creating custom events is very simple, you can use the same system that Bukkit uses without ruining performance.

There are two (2) things to keep in mind when you create a Custom Event. They are "extend Event" and "static handlers." With static handlers, you must input the following code into your custom event:

private static final HandlerList handlers = new HandlerList();

public HandlerList getHandlers() {
    return handlers;
}

public static HandlerList getHandlerList() {
    return handlers;
}

This block of code makes the EventHandlers contained inside your own event, keeping any unrelated events completely separated.

Custom Event Example[]

The following example shows how easy it is to create your own "CustomEvent."

import org.bukkit.event.Event;
import org.bukkit.event.HandlerList;

public final class CustomEvent extends Event {
    private static final HandlerList handlers = new HandlerList();
    private String message;

    public CustomEvent(String example) {
        message = example;
    }

    public String getMessage() {
        return message;
    }

    public HandlerList getHandlers() {
        return handlers;
    }

    public static HandlerList getHandlerList() {
        return handlers;
    }
}

Calling your Custom Event[]

You are in control of creating and calling your events, where you call it is completely up to you. Here's an example

// Create the event here
CustomEvent event = new CustomEvent("Sample Message");
// Call the event
Bukkit.getServer().getPluginManager().callEvent(event);
// Now you do the event
Bukkit.getServer().broadcastMessage(event.getMessage());

Remember: You are in control of your events. If you don't call it, and act upon it, it doesn't happen!

Listening to a Custom Event[]

How do you listen to a custom event you say? Simple, the same way as listening to a normal event!

import org.bukkit.event.Listener;
import org.bukkit.event.EventHandler;

public final class CustomListener implements Listener {
    @EventHandler
    public void normalLogin(CustomEvent event) {
        // Some code here
    }
}

Making your CustomEvent Cancellable[]

If you ever want to make your event cancellable, remember one thing: "implements Cancellable." Just like you would import Listener. It's really that simple, let me show you an example!

import org.bukkit.event.Event;
import org.bukkit.event.HandlerList;
import org.bukkit.event.Cancellable;

public final class CustomEvent extends Event implements Cancellable {
    private static final HandlerList handlers = new HandlerList();
    private String message;
    private boolean cancelled;

    public CustomEvent(String example) {
        message = example;
    }

    public String getMessage() {
        return message;
    }

    public boolean isCancelled() {
        return cancelled;
    }

    public void setCancelled(boolean cancel) {
        cancelled = cancel;
    }

    public HandlerList getHandlers() {
        return handlers;
    }

    public static HandlerList getHandlerList() {
        return handlers;
    }
}

Afterwards, you would check if a plugin had cancelled the event in your code, before processing normally

// Create the event here
CustomEvent event = new CustomEvent("Sample Message");
// Call the event
Bukkit.getServer().getPluginManager().callEvent(event);
// Check if the event is not cancelled
if (!event.isCancelled()) {
    // Now you do the event
    Bukkit.getServer().broadcastMessage(event.getMessage());
}

Videos[]

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