Currently, your command setup has a few problems. You've got two different scoreboard scores for the two teams, displaying those scores in different locations, and adding a point to all players (by using just @a
without specifying which players you actually want).
The simple solution is to use a team selector in your point-increment system.
/scoreboard players add @a[team=TeamName] PointsName 1
Boom. Your system, as you have it designed right now, will work. This will select all of the players on TeamName and give them a point in their designated scoreboard.
However, from a design standpoint, there's a much better way to do this by using fake players. To start, set up just one scoreboard and put it in the sidebar:
/scoreboard objectives add points dummy Points
/scoreboard objectives setdisplay sidebar points
Now, the /scoreboard players
command doesn't actually require you to specify a player that is online. In fact, that player doesn't even need to exist. But it will happily keep a score for them. So, whenever you want to increment the team score, you can just do this:
/scoreboard players add Team points 1
What this will give you is a scoreboard that keeps track of team points in one entry, in one scoreboard. That way, players can compare, at a glance, what the score is, without needing to rely on the tab menu.
I understand your problem and it may be a problem with Minecraft. If you purchased Minecraft this website might help
Also more of your situation is This
This is for un-modified Minecraft. If you modified it you will need to make a copy of your modified version and re-install Minecraft.
Google 'Java Minecraft Fix' and check them out!
Otherwise just google 'Java Download' and click on the first one.
Sorry for the google searches, the website didn't allow me to add more than 2 links
It should self override. Otherwise just reset your game. 1.9 snapshots could also cause this problem.
Best Answer
jar
files need to be open with Java;Windows
Go to the folder that the
.jar
file is located. Then push alt+D type in cmd and hit Enter. This will open cmd.exe with the location set to the correct spot, otherwise you could change directory with thecd (directory)
command.Now just type in
java -jar minecraft_server1.8.8.jar
and hit Enter to open the file.Linux
Open the Terminal: Applcations > Accessories > Terminal. and then change directories to where the Minecraft server jar is located with the
cd
command. Then type injava -jar minecraft_server.jar
Additional arguments:
no gui
to the end of the command to open the server without the GUI-Xms500M
and-Xmx1G
betweenjava
and-jar
. You can change the size (the500M
and1G
parts) to whatever you like. The default value forxmx
is 256MB, if you encounter ajava.lang.OutOfMemoryError
you may need to increasexmx
when you start it with this command line.