Difference between revisions of "Mod Cleaning Tutorial"

86 bytes added ,  13:53, 10 June 2009
imported>Leeus
m (→‎TES4Edit: Added link to new tutorial)
imported>Dev akm
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You can also use TES4Edit's "Remove identical to master records" function, which automates the process for any records that are unchanged from the master. This doesn't catch records which have minor accidental changes, but it can still help. When you do this, make a copy of your mod, use TES4Edit's "Remove identical to master records" on it, then load your original "dirty" mod and use TES4Edit's "Compare to" function to compare it with the cleaned copy.
You can also use TES4Edit's "Remove identical to master records" function, which automates the process for any records that are unchanged from the master. This doesn't catch records which have minor accidental changes, but it can still help. When you do this, make a copy of your mod, use TES4Edit's "Remove identical to master records" on it, then load your original "dirty" mod and use TES4Edit's "Compare to" function to compare it with the cleaned copy.


There's a more complete description of the process [http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Tes4Mod:Tes4View#Cleaning_a_Dirty_Plugin here].
There are several good tutorials on the subject of mod cleaning with TES4Edit, but the [[TES4Edit_Cleaning_Guide|TES4Edit Cleaning Guide]] is by far the most comprehensive. Other guides can be found [http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Tes4Mod:Tes4View#Cleaning_a_Dirty_Plugin here] and [[TES4Edit/Mod_cleaning_tutorial_with_TES4Edit|here]].
 
Also, there's a [[TES4Edit/Mod_cleaning_tutorial_with_TES4Edit|tutorial]] which explains in detail the cleaning steps.


Wiki link:[[TES4Edit]]
Wiki link:[[TES4Edit]]
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