Author Topic: How to add a timer to things?  (Read 1713 times)

I'm working a prison escape and I did this little thing where if a prisoner is escaping, an alarm inside the prison goes off. I want to know if there is a way to put time on how long it goes off. If the prisoner escapes, I want it to go off, if all guards/prisoners die, the alarm goes off.

Any help with this? I'm pretty sure it's an event...

use the timer on the left with the 0 in it
change its value
1000 is one second
2000 is two seconds, etc


There is no event that's called when all members of a team die

use the timer on the left with the 0 in it
change its value
1000 is one second
2000 is two seconds, etc
he means he wants to control how long it lasts

is it music or just a sound?

There is no event that's called when all members of a team die
you could do onminigameend (or onminigameroundend  I maybe think it's called)

he means he wants to control how long it lasts

is it music or just a sound?
It's a music

Nevermind, thanks for the help Trogtor

Nevermind, thanks for the help Trogtor
please don't just say "nevermind"
what did you do to solve the problem? or did you not solve it at all?

please don't just say "nevermind"
what did you do to solve the problem? or did you not solve it at all?
he said "thanks trogtor" so im assuming he did what i told him to do

please don't just say "nevermind"
what did you do to solve the problem? or did you not solve it at all?
I understand that people shouldn't day "nevermind"

From what it looks like it seems he wanted to choose something else

he said "thanks trogtor" so im assuming he did what i told him to do
but the word "nevermind" seems to imply that he stopped trying, and it leaves it unclear whether he's thanking you for trying to help, despite it not doing what he wanted, or if he's thanking you for solving his problem and said "nevermind" because he didn't care

I'm not even sure what he was trying to do. I think he's using "go off" to mean two different things in different sentences

stop

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« Last Edit: November 18, 2015, 03:21:00 PM by Badspot »

but the word "nevermind" seems to imply that he stopped trying, and it leaves it unclear whether he's thanking you for trying to help, despite it not doing what he wanted, or if he's thanking you for solving his problem and said "nevermind" because he didn't care

I'm not even sure what he was trying to do. I think he's using "go off" to mean two different things in different sentences

just stop