Updates stat Value for the match.
Succeeds if Scope is set to Match.
If the stat does not have levels, Value is clamped between 0 and Max Value.
If the stat does have levels, the Value is not clamped and setting a value below 0 or above Max Value will
decrement or increment the level appropriately. e.g. if Number of Levels is 10, Max Value is 100
and you are currently level 0, a Value of 550 will set you to Level 5 and Value 50.
Verse using statement |
using { /Fortnite.com/Devices } |
SetValueForMatch<public>(Value:int)<transacts><decides>:void
Parameters
SetValueForMatch takes the following parameters:
| Name | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
Value |
int |
Attributes, Specifiers, and Effects
Specifiers
The following specifiers determine how you can interact with SetValueForMatch in your programs. For the complete list of specifiers, see the Specifiers Page.
| Specifier | Meaning |
|---|---|
public |
The identifier is universally accessible. You can use this on modules, classes, interfaces, structs, enums, methods, and data. |
Effects
The following effects determine how SetValueForMatch behaves in your programs. For the complete list of effects, see the Effect Specifers section of the Specifiers Page.
| Effect | Meaning |
|---|---|
transacts |
This effect indicates that any actions performed by the function can be rolled back. The transacts effect is required any time a mutable variable (var) is written. You'll be notified when you compile your code if the transacts effect was added to a function that can't be rolled back. Note that this check is not done for functions with the native specifier. |
decides |
Indicates that the function can fail, and that calling this function is a failable expression. Function definitions with the decides effect must also have the transacts effect, which means the actions performed by this function can be rolled back (as if the actions were never performed), if there's a failure anywhere in the function. |