i would like a macro that once i click it, it put roar of sacrifice on my druid healer partner for 2's, any help?
i would like a macro that once i click it, it put roar of sacrifice on my druid healer partner for 2's, any help?
Roonweld (Moonrunner) 80 survival hunter
Dokkan (Moonrunner) 80 Blood Deathknight
Fazlim (Moonrunner) 80 Holy Priest
Roonshammy (Moonrunner) 65 Enhance Shaman
Qim (Moonrunner) 61 Retribution Pally
Rooncraft (Moonrunner) 60 Fire mage
/cast [target=Druid] Roar of Sacrifice
BO0ooOOooOOo0oooOO0OOooOO0ooo0OOOo0oOO0NEST0RM!
http://us.battle.net/wow/en/characte...uttnikk/simple
^Deepz served here^
this will keep my current target right?Originally Posted by Sidorenko
Roonweld (Moonrunner) 80 survival hunter
Dokkan (Moonrunner) 80 Blood Deathknight
Fazlim (Moonrunner) 80 Holy Priest
Roonshammy (Moonrunner) 65 Enhance Shaman
Qim (Moonrunner) 61 Retribution Pally
Rooncraft (Moonrunner) 60 Fire mage
yes, it should
BO0ooOOooOOo0oooOO0OOooOO0ooo0OOOo0oOO0NEST0RM!
http://us.battle.net/wow/en/characte...uttnikk/simple
^Deepz served here^
Wouldn't that macro make it so that you only cast it if you target a druid?
imo should be
/tar (Your Partner)
/cast Roar of Sacrifice
/targetlasttarget
or what you can do is
/cast [target=Druid] Roar of Sacrifice
/target (Your name)
/cast roar of Sacrifice
/targetlasttarget
That should make it so that if you are targeting your partner you'll cast it, but if you aren't it'll cast Roar of Sacrifice on yourself. I could be wrong, i'm not great with macros, but assuming that Sidorenko was correct and I assumed correctly about how his macro worked
No.Originally Posted by Eldunari
You put your partners name where "Druid" is, and you win.
i thought [Target=Druid] Part makes it so that if he has his target as his partner then it'll cast it, if he doesn't it won't do anything? Or am I miserably wrong
...I'm pretty sure I answered you.Originally Posted by Eldunari
I have macros with character names in them that work when I have bosses targeted.
/cast [target=name] Sacred Shield
So no. You don't need that person targeted. Otherwise what would be the point of the macro?
Some clarification:
[target=....] outlines the target for the spell itself. Not your own target.
The macro that would do what you're saying is [target=target] and that's rather pointless.