Scoreboard

The scoreboard system is a complex gameplay mechanic intended mostly for map makers. It is used via commands and command blocks.

Objectives
Objectives are a combination of name, display name, and criteria, and track an integer number of points for players. The full score range is -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647, and does not support decimals.

An objective's name is used internally when referenced in commands, target arguments, and in the file format. It is case-sensitive and must be a single word.

Conversely, the display name can be multiple words, and is displayed publicly in various situations. It is also case-sensitive.

An objective's criteria determines its behavior:

A player's score in any objective may be changed via commands, unless it is read-only. It may be increased or decreased by a specific amount, or set to a specific value. Command blocks can also be used to check a player's score for any objective, with the arguments score_name and score_name_min. In these arguments, name is the internal name of the objective to test for. score_name passes players with at most the specified number of points, while score_name_min passes players with at least the specified number of points. For example, "testfor @p[score_deaths=5,score_deaths_min=1]" in a Command Block will make a comparator provide output if a player has died at least once and has died no more than 5 times, assuming "deaths" is an objective of the "deathCount" criteria.

Display slots
Via the "scoreboard objectives setdisplay" command (see command reference), players' scores in specific objectives can be displayed in certain 'slots' in-game.

Teams
Teams are a combination of name, display name, prefix, suffix, friendly fire option, and a list of players who are on the team.

As with objectives, the name and display name of a team are case-sensitive, name is a single word used internally, and display name can be multiple words.

The prefix and suffix are inserted before and after the names of players on a team - without using external editors, the only possible prefixes are formatting codes for team colors, and the only possible suffix is the reset code (so characters after a player's name aren't formatted). Prefixes and suffixes will be added to the names of players in chat, the active players list, the sidebar, and above their heads.

The friendly fire option allows control of whether team members can harm each other. Its default mode, "true", makes no changes to PvP mechanics. When set to "false", however, it prevents players on the same team from causing damage to each other with melee attacks, bows, and Splash Potions of Harming. Note that players on the same team may still inflict negative status effects on each other with potions, even if friendly fire is false. Also note that this setting is not saved when a server is restarted: it will always default to true unless manually changed (via command) within the current session.

It is important to note that a single player can only be on one team: teams cannot share players.

Command blocks can be used to check whether a player is on a team with the "team" argument; the "!" character may be placed before a name to check for players not on the team. For example, "testfor @p[team=red]" in a Command Block will provide comparator output if a player is on the "red" team. Similarly, "testfor @p[team=!red,team=!blue]" will provide output for players who are neither on "red" or "blue".

NBT format
The file scoreboard.dat in the 'data' folder of a Minecraft world stores the scoreboard data for that world as a GZip'd NBT file:


 * The root tag.
 * : The scoreboard data.
 * : A list of compound tags representing objectives.
 * An objective.
 * : The criteria of this objective. Must be "dummy", "deathCount", "playerKillCount", "totalKillCount", or "health".
 * : The display name of this objective. If none was specified during the objective's creation, this will be identical to the Name tag below.
 * : The internal name of this objective.
 * : A list of compound tags representing scores tracked by the scoreboard system.
 * A tracked player/objective pair with a score.
 * : The score this player has in this objective.
 * : The name of the player who has this score in this objective.
 * : The internal name of the objective which this player has this score in.
 * : A list of compound tags representing teams.
 * A Team.
 * : The display name of this team. If none was specified during the team's creation, this will be identical to the Name tag below.
 * : The internal name of this team.
 * : The prefix prepended to names of players on this team. Ordinarily, it is a Formatting Code.
 * : The suffix appended to names of players on this team. Ordinarily, it the reset code, "§r", to prevent formatting from spilling over.
 * : A list of names of players on this team.
 * The name of a player on this team.
 * : A set of slots which are displaying specific objectives.
 * : The internal name of the objective displayed in the "list" slot.
 * : The internal name of the objective displayed in the "sidebar" slot.
 * : The internal name of the objective displayed in the "belowName" slot.

Bugs

 * If a scoreboard is displayed in the sidebar, it will disappear when traveling to/from the Nether and can only be restored by closing and opening the map, then running the set scoreboard display again.
 * Occasionally, an objective set to the sidebar will not show up until you set the same objective to the player list, then open the list with Tab.
 * The team option friendly fire is not saved with the map, and resets to its default.

Gallery
Scoreboard Tableau de bord 计分板 Tablica wyników