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From the album: PSMD Hacking Adventures
Not PSMD, but still counts! -
Version 1.0.0
101402 downloads
Pokésav is a save editing tool for Generation 4 (Diamond, Pearl, Platinum, HeartGold, SoulSilver). Its development has ceased. Users are encouraged to use PKHeX instead. Pokésav does have a few key features that distinguish it from other things, such as Underground editing; if you don't need something specific, however, stick to PKHeX for gen 4 editing. There are different files for each game and language. Use this table to find the version you want: English Japanese French German Spanish Dutch Diamond/Pearl pokesav_en.zip pokesav_jp.zip pokesav_fr.zip pokesav_de.zip pokesav_sp.zip pokesav_nl.zip Platinum pokesavplat_en.zip pokesavplat_jp.zip pokesavplat_fr.zip HeartGold/SoulSilver pokesavhgss_en.zip pokesavhgss_jp.zip Zip file password (with the space and capitalization): Project Pokemon SHA256 (pokesav_de.zip) = 547ab12dd2bf912a3f7ed1a8fbeffe49aa47502a2f1d39799f95350f7e6478e7 SHA256 (pokesav_en.zip) = 91930d8b0255fb55c8cdcb8400b9d3db8d4e361e15c9d24fc920e307ca12e44d SHA256 (pokesav_fr.zip) = 2f3012bf1354095fd1dd1a74f58741f630f58c681ee52d7c80d0c2d6067ebd3d SHA256 (pokesavhgss_en.zip) = 36379e67c49a91831bf6ec91e5921da6c9078e549e2620e4dbfc4da528df667a SHA256 (pokesavhgss_jp.zip) = fec66b59da0311f3605077bbd31d816a0fd297f08633f3c45da1dcbb7bab66cc SHA256 (pokesav_jp.zip) = dae7ae74200dddf024c4a6aefc691adc3e965334c9ecc4a3facc253d839e680a SHA256 (pokesav_nl.zip) = 1f334997f0537a9728d2b8ba196a1ad783897938d2caf36865fa9e430ba8cd52 SHA256 (pokesavplat_en_old1.zip) = f77c0bb0b22fdc9fab2134dd32d6bf4b2552b477e0a9f6dae34dfebccdb50b96 SHA256 (pokesavplat_en_old2.zip) = e19093fc426c728331ea2c52e6919315a0ca60e7b44c9ef4776b9b3b532688bd SHA256 (pokesavplat_en_old3.zip) = fdc586835f4f561f3acb45a2c2dafc96f79ad050adf9908d751e0a8d210eedeb SHA256 (pokesavplat_en.zip) = fb15e009c35317a239d325a0deb120799d70eec19aff66fa67588181aa91acc9 SHA256 (pokesavplat_fr.zip) = 043440a72f85068b756d0ff0f1b88b008eee08e57d8ddea04df310e8d77bd7f9 SHA256 (pokesavplat_jp.zip) = b4e3b4b0e5a68e9b48f75b0396551c07304276cbf912a0000a514856f05afbc1 SHA256 (pokesav_sp.zip) = 7d3a8f01677d8bbcaff74b057fdb79f35e437452d892787daff72701926a1a7f -
Only thing is there are literally thousands of these images that we could potentially use for reactions. I'd love to add more, but there'll need to be some reasoning behind it. I actually had 2 more in mind I wanted to add, but I couldn't justify them to myself. Here's an old screenshot I almost forgot to replace:
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forums [Suggestion] Less pixelated standard profile pic
evandixon replied to BlackShark's topic in Project Pokémon Feedback
Default picture updated. Thanks for the suggestion! -
Our website as undergone a major update, which brings some cool new features! Clubs Clubs are sub-communities that you run! Have your own forums, downloads, group blogs, calendars, and more! Read more about it at the Project Pokémon Blog: Galleries Galleries are like forums or files, except optimized for images. You can create your own, or you can add them to clubs! Sample Gallery in the "I Love Cats" Club Reactions We've always had a Like button, but sometimes a Like doesn't quite express how you truly feel about a post. With reactions, you can react in one of many ways. Here's what we have so far: Thanks - Share how you feel about something with the same energy Victini uses to describe his V-WHEEEEL!!!! Amazed - For things so amazing your eyes start watering out of sheer happiness. Teary-Eyed - Sometimes bad news makes you want to cry. Confused - Eh.. what? We can add more, so if you have any ideas, just let us know! The Blog Sidebar We recently got Blogs, which are basically your personal corner of the website. Now you can customize it even further with the ability to add a sidebar. This can be used for anything you'd like, including social media links or a blog overview. On my Sky Editor blog, I'm using it to keep track of my GitHub links for Sky Editor, my plugin-based save editor: File Attachment Improvements You can now upload files and images directly from your computer's file browser, using either drag and drop, or copy/paste. As described by the Invision Power website: Source Recently-Used Devices In your account settings, you can see a list of recently-used devices. We recommend you check this periodically, so you can know if your account is secure. View full article
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This is Lucy. She grew up in an animal shelter, and we finally adopted her a few years later. Now she hangs around the house, looking out the window, being chased by us or chasing us back, or hiding in the closet somewhere when there's strangers in the house.
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From the album: Lucy
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From the album: Lucy
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From the album: Lucy
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From the album: Lucy
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Yes, but we're probably not going to keep as close of an eye on them as with the rest of the site. Clubs are sub-communities run by users (read: not us*), so it's the responsibility of the club leaders to moderate clubs. That said, site-wide rules still apply, and we will remove content that's obviously illegal or NSFW. * I intend to run one or more clubs, but at that point I won't really be representing Project Pokémon staff as much as I will be representing the club.
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By night and by weekend I'm an admin here at Project Pokémon (when I'm not busy saving Hyrule or doing other stuff). But by day, I'm a software developer for a certain company. This company has an internal legacy system written in Classic ASP (a really old language used to make websites) that we have to maintain, and releasing changes to it is never fun. Today we released a month's worth of changes, far more than we like to release at one time. (We couldn't release because reasons; although, we probably should have added a feature switch. Lesson learned.) Within this legacy system, there's a page that is designed to be printed out. Users will then scan an I2of5 barcode on it with a handheld scanner, making it easier to continue their work. After the updated the system, however, we got reports that the barcodes wouldn't scan anymore. Barcodes that were printed before this update worked fine. We reprinted the barcode that was working, and sure enough, the new release gave a different barcode generated from the same source text. I had my hands all over the page with this barcode, but I know I didn't touch the barcode itself. Thanks to source control, we were able to use git blame and looked at the entire code path responsible for the generation of this I2of5 barcode. This kind of barcode is generated by encoding some text into what looks like garbage, but looks like and scans like a barcode when this garbage is displayed using a particular font. Unfortunately, nothing in that code path has changed for years, and since we released this thing a month ago without any (related) issues, we had to find out what changed. Yet comparing the output of the old and new code showed different barcodes. The new barcode's garbage-looking text had some special characters in it called "replacement characters", which is a special kind of character to indicate something's wrong with the character encoding (more on that in a bit). We inspected the HTTP headers and HTML metadata, and there was no difference, so it wasn't a matter of the web browser interpreting the raw text data incorrectly. So we had to try something else. We used a git bisect (or rather a manual version of it, because of a bunch of branching weirdness - don't ask) and eventually found the exact commit that introduced the issue. The only thing that changed about the page in question is that a new ASP file was included. This ASP file, along with the ones it in turn includes, are simply containers for functions and classes and are not intended to write anything to the page. To debug what was causing the problem we removed parts of this included file until finally there was nothing left. We tried removing the reference to this file altogether, and that made the problem go away. We put it back and made sure the file was empty, and to double check, we removed that file and re-created it to make double sure it was empty. Turns out including an empty text file causes issues with our barcode! What is a text file? It's just a file containing bytes that programs interpret as text. But there's different kinds of text. ASCII text interprets one byte as one character. One byte can have a value from 0-255, and while standard ASCII only has characters for 0-127, extended ASCII has characters for 128-255 too. There's also variants of Unicode, where multiple bytes can be used for a single character, which is useful for characters that aren't found in English. How is a program to know what kind of text is in a text file though? By adding extra bytes to the beginning of the file to indicate the text encoding: the Byte Order Mark (BOM). Using HxD, I found that these "empty" text files weren't in fact empty, they had the BOM bytes to mark the file as UTF-8, which is a variant of Unicode that looks like ASCII until the 128-255 byte value range. By including this "empty" file, we were including the BOM, which changed the character encoding of the entire page, completely changing the meaning of the text that's used to display the barcodes (because it uses extended ASCII characters for some reason). Thankfully, this whole release didn't go as bad as it could have. Because of our Blue/Green deployment setup, we weren't under as much pressure as we could have otherwise been, and we only had to revert to the previous version twice, and the release only took 8 hours (because of testing and debugging other issues*). * Bonus material: when using Powershell to create a virtual application in IIS, note that "userName" is case sensitive in some versions of IIS. In 7.5, it's fine to use "username", but when using 8.5, that case sensitivity will cause setting the application credentials to silently fail. (Not that we encountered a situation exactly like this one or anything.)
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forums Signature links seem broken
evandixon replied to wrathsoffire76's topic in Project Pokémon Feedback
We had some hiccups with the system earlier, causing some things to break (sorry about that). Can you name the users this affects by sending me a PM or opening a support thread? -
Since we have a new awards system, this post will no longer be maintained. If you have any suggestions for new badges, please create a thread in Forums Feedback, or if you wish to nominate someone for an award, please open a support thread.
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A new forum update is coming soon, and one of the features I'm looking forward to is Device Management. This makes it more difficult for others to gain unauthorized access to your account. From the IPS Community website:
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Froakie does have good emotes Froakie full of herself while being admired
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I think that the Mystery Dungeon portraits would be perfect for this. The attached images should prove my point (after being cropped). Source, since starting up a special build of Sky Editor requires effort. Now to chose which ones...
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A new forum update is coming soon, and one of the features I'm looking forward to is the blog sidebar. Project Pokémon recently got Blogs. They're already your personal corner of the site, and with this, you can customize them even further. From the IPS Community website:
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Yep! Her name's Lucy.
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A new forum update is coming soon, and one of the features I'm hyped for are Reactions. We already have post liking, but sometimes a "like" just isn't specific enough. From the IPS Community website: We have the ability to create custom reactions, so if you have any requests for reactions, let us know in the comments!