![]() And to think, I was happy with only 5%! The source code leak posted yesterday has over 95% of the original game's documentation. As a developer for Toontown, it was like Christmas day seeing something like this for the first time. They had copied and pasted, say, 5% of the game's code in order for this program to run. This is a tool Disney used to create promotional images for the game. ![]() Some of us have spent years memorizing what certain things in the code do, where they are, etc.īack in June, we were lucky enough to get our hands on a small snippet of Toontown code with documentation via the way of Robot Toon Manager. For the past 7 years that fans have been developing this game, we've had to make sense of Disney's work all by ourselves with little to no guidance. So when us fans began to decompile the game in 2013, there was no documentation to be found. That's just the nature of compiling the game. When Disney compiled the live game back in the day, all documentation would get automatically lost. In the past, we've had ZERO documentation. It gives us a better grasp as to what the heck the Disney programmers were thinking when they originally wrote the game's code. ![]() So what do these two things mean exactly? Allow me to explain.Ĭode that has documentation is incredibly useful for developers.
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