Studying the starmap XML output, it looks like the neutral wormholes don't have a destination galaxy mentioned.
I don't know if the destination coordinates even make sense in this case, since the exit location scales with the destination galaxy's size.
Code:
<system systemId="IJWB" name="EUD'OGB'GH'h" x="255.2" y="-84.6" z="-18.8" eod="Surveyed">
<wormhole destX="254.3" destY="-82.1" destZ="-20.5" destSystemId="SRVB" polarity="positive"/>
<wormhole destX="256.3" destY="-83.9" destZ="-16.9" destSystemId="FIWB" polarity="positive"/>
<wormhole destX="254.3" destY="-82.1" destZ="-20.5" destSystemId="SRVB" polarity="negative"/>
<wormhole destX="256.3" destY="-83.9" destZ="-16.9" destSystemId="FIWB" polarity="negative"/>
<wormhole destX="254.9" destY="-83.6" destZ="-18.8" polarity="neutral"/>
I don't know if the destination coordinates even make sense in this case, since the exit location scales with the destination galaxy's size.
(02-15-2023, 08:51 PM)Haxus Wrote: I made a change to scale the destination location according to the size change in galaxies. If you are near the edge of the origin galaxy, you will arrive near the edge of the destination galaxy.So maybe they need adjusting too if possible, otherwise just remove the destination coordinates from the neutral wormholes altogether.
Rotation around the Z axis of the galaxy is consistent. That means a one way intergalactic wormhole will always arrive at the same location in the destination galaxy, wherever that happens to be.