Dice Roller Dice Roller is a Java-based and compact Graphical User Interface for doing computerized rolling of polyhedral dice. The program displays a histogram of all roll results, as well as the total and other useful statistics. One thing it does not do, however, is keep a history of results, and as such you may find a simpler but less spiffy-looking solution such as the d20 Dice Bag over at Pen, Paper, & Pixel to be more useful. The "Ace" feature was included for gaming systems such as Deadlands that have open-ended dice rolling mechanics. With this mechanic, if any dice roll the maximum value (e.g., 10 on a d10), reroll them and add the maximum value to the result. If they roll max again, repeat. So any die can achieve an arbitrarily high result, but with increasingly infinitesimal probability. The ten buttons on the bottom are presets for common dice combinations. Of course, clicking one will roll those dice, but you can also right click the button to type in your own combination and override the preset. Dice Roller Version 0.9.1, March 11, 2009 Minor changes * Export to text, using formats such as CSV or one-line per entry. New feature. * A number of minor graphical adjustments. * Access to a "Help" dialog. This will only show the program requirements, though. * Clear the current data for a preset. * Right-click menu option to save the data. * Pressing F1 now opens the "Help" window. * The histogram window's bounds check was updated. * Pressing F1 now opens the "Help" window. * There is now a "about" window available with program details. * The "Play" button now opens the Roll Dice window. * When the user is finished, click the "Cancel" button to close the window. * When the user is finished, click the "Cancel" button to close the window. * Now accepting files in addition to URLs. * A new "Set Up" tab now exists for setting up presets. * When rolling for percentile results, Dice Roller now keeps a number of all-time historical records to aid you in the future. * The grid view has been updated, and the legend is now more intuitive. * The grid view has been updated, and the legend is now more Dice Roller Crack + [March-2022] This software was written by Greg Walton, Release date: October 22, 2008 Version: 1.0 Features: Histogram Up to 128 roll results (history kept, but not displayed) Optional custom presets Option to add "Ace" results Option to pass results back to the program via the command line Option to "Write to File" results to a new text file, with the filename passed to it via the command line Other Programs that may help you include, but are not limited to: (Permalink): (Permalink): (Permalink): (Permalink): (Permalink): (Permalink): About Me: I'm primarily a software developer, but I do a lot of game design, referee, and other game-related programming as well. The main software I wrote was a program for a joint science-fiction game, which I co-wrote with Joseph W. Long. I'm not happy to say I lost my copy of the manuscript years ago, but here's a link to a PDF copy I made from a scan I found online: I've also written a bunch of books about the game, including the best-selling and widely-read Star Wars d20 RPG. The website for that is and it has tons of goodies for free. I've also written numerous books, many of them RPGs, and have put most of them up for free on the site. I've also written a ton of articles for various publications, but they're in the process of being collected into a book. I wrote a short review for the book here: As for other programs, I wrote a program for sim 1a423ce670 Dice Roller With Key For PC Simulates a fumbling monkey rolling d20. Macro to assign dice to buttons with the keyboard. You can also use the keyboard to select a preset number of dice and roll them. Dice Roller is freeware! Dice Roller.NET Description: A small Java-based implementation of the Dice Roller The program displays a histogram of all roll results, as well as the total and other useful statistics. One thing it does not do, however, is keep a history of results, and as such you may find a simpler but less spiffy-looking solution such as the d20 Dice Bag over at Pen, Paper, & Pixel to be more useful. The "Ace" feature was included for gaming systems such as Deadlands that have open-ended dice rolling mechanics. With this mechanic, if any dice roll the maximum value (e.g., 10 on a d10), reroll them and add the maximum value to the result. If they roll max again, repeat. So any die can achieve an arbitrarily high result, but with increasingly infinitesimal probability. The ten buttons on the bottom are presets for common dice combinations. Of course, clicking one will roll those dice, but you can also right click the button to type in your own combination and override the preset. KEYMACRO Description: Simulates a fumbling monkey rolling d20. Macro to assign dice to buttons with the keyboard. You can also use the keyboard to select a preset number of dice and roll them. Dice Roller is freeware! Dice Roller Example: In the example below the macro works: 1. Toggling the X key on-off 2. Clicking a preset button (E.g. 12-12) 3. Rerolling the dice that were rolled. 4. Redrawing the results in the textbox Dice Roller Tutorial: To use the macro you will have to know: 1. The macro and keyboard 2. The proper Macro Key (numbers on your keyboard) 3. Proper Macro Event (the event you want to happen when you are on your key 4. The "Dice" macro (numbers 1-3 in your keyboard, left to right) 5. The "Dice" Macro event (4 in your keyboard, left to right) I can send you a link to a tutorial video if you What's New in the Dice Roller? System Requirements For Dice Roller: Linux, Mac OS X, Windows: CPU: Intel Pentium 4 3.2GHz (GHz), AMD Athlon X2 3.4GHz (GHz) Memory: 2GB (3GB recommended) Graphics: 256 MB VRAM DirectX: 9.0c DVD: DVD ROM Sound: Speakers Minimum of a 1280x1024 screen USB: Mouse Keyboard Virus, Spyware, or Malware Protection: Preferably, by default
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