Pay toll on the A2 highway (Cernavoda nuclear power plant in the background).
Southern Romania.
Carpathian Mountains in the background (Brasov county).
Its you againtraian.traian wrote:The pictures are ok, but the A2 is very very tree less.
It's way more simple than you might think.Tronni22 wrote: I still don't understand anything, but I don't think it's a good idea to try to explain it to me, unless you want this to last for pages
I think I've got it nowPurno wrote:It's way more simple than you might think.Tronni22 wrote: I still don't understand anything, but I don't think it's a good idea to try to explain it to me, unless you want this to last for pages
This is part of the map. On the map you see thin black lines forming squares, with a number in it. That's a sector. For example, the city I'm creating, Kovel, is in sector +0012-0002 (that's x,y-coordinates). Lublin is in sector +0010-0002. The editor only loads up to a certain amount of terrain elements, that's why the area around Lublin isn't displayed (would be too heavy on my machine if it'd load everything).
Since each sector has it's own seperate unique files, I can safely edit Kovel while someone else works in Lublin. A sector is nothing more a square piece of the map. Similar to how most city maps are divided in a square raster to allow people to quickly find what they're looking for via the register.