Create a navigation_target
from a fort_target_info
.
Verse using statement |
using { /Fortnite.com/AI } |
MakeNavigationTarget<native><public><experimental>(TargetInfo:fort_target_info)<diverges><reads><writes><allocates><no_rollback>:
navigation_target
Parameters
MakeNavigationTarget
takes the following parameters:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
TargetInfo |
fort_target_info |
Attributes and Effects
The following attributes and effects determine how MakeNavigationTarget
behaves and how you can use it in your programs. For the complete list of attribute and effect specifiers, see the Specifiers Page.
Attribute | Meaning |
---|---|
native |
Indicates that the definition details of the element are implemented in C++. Verse definitions with the native specifier auto-generate C++ definitions that a developer can then fill out its implementation. You can use this specifier on classes, interfaces, enums, methods, and data. |
public |
The identifier is universally accessible. You can use this on modules, classes, interfaces, structs, enums, methods, and data. |
Effect | Meaning |
---|---|
diverges |
Indicates that calls to the function may not complete. |
reads |
This effect indicates that the same inputs to the function may not always produce the same output. The behavior depends on factors external to the specified inputs, such as memory or the containing package version. |
writes |
This effect indicates that the function may change values in memory. |
allocates |
This effect indicates that the function may instantiate an object in memory. Allocating <unique> classes requires the <allocates> specifier. |
no_rollback |
This is the default effect when no exclusive effect is specified. The no_rollback effect indicates that any actions performed by the function cannot be undone and so the function cannot be used in a failure context. This effect cannot be manually specified. |