Rotation arguments

An image of a rotation argument showing /rotationargument 90 180

The RotationArgument allows users to specify a pair of pitch and yaw coordinates. By default (using the ~ symbol), this refers to the player's current pitch and yaw of where they are looking at.

The RotationArgument class returns a Rotation object, which consists of the following methods:

Method nameWhat it does
float getPitch()Returns a player's pitch (up and down rotation)
float getYaw()Returns a player's yaw (left and right rotation)
float getNormalizedPitch()Returns a player's pitch between -90 and 90 degrees
float getNormalizedYaw()Returns a player's yaw between -180 and 180 degrees

Example: Rotate an armor stand head

Say we want to make an armor stand look in a certain direction. To do this, we'll use the following command:

/rotate <rotation> <target>

To do this, we'll use the rotation from the RotationArgument and select an entity using the EntitySelectorArgument.OneEntity class. We then check if our entity is an armor stand and if so, we set its head pose to the given rotation.

new CommandAPICommand("rotate")
    .withArguments(new RotationArgument("rotation"))
    .withArguments(new EntitySelectorArgument.OneEntity("target"))
    .executes((sender, args) -> {
        Rotation rotation = (Rotation) args[0];
        Entity target = (Entity) args[1];

        if (target instanceof ArmorStand armorStand) {
            armorStand.setHeadPose(new EulerAngle(Math.toRadians(rotation.getPitch()), Math.toRadians(rotation.getYaw() - 90), 0));
        }
    })
    .register();
CommandAPICommand("rotate")
    .withArguments(RotationArgument("rotation"))
    .withArguments(EntitySelectorArgument.OneEntity("target"))
    .executes(CommandExecutor { _, args ->
        val rotation = args[0] as Rotation
        val target = args[1] as Entity

        if (target is ArmorStand) {
            target.setHeadPose(EulerAngle(Math.toRadians(rotation.pitch.toDouble()), Math.toRadians(rotation.yaw.toDouble() - 90), 0.0))
        }
    })
    .register()

Note how the head pose requires an EulerAngle as opposed to a pitch and yaw. To account for this, we convert our rotation (which is in degrees) into an EulerAngle in radians.