Page 1 of 1

What is this kick?

Posted: Sat Oct 03, 2009 12:03 am
by KhyrOO
Yesterday my clanmates friend was kicked for this reason by KAC:
L 10/02/2009 - 17:25:28: Corrupted CVar response: Cali| xlaw (ID: STEAM_0:0:22172000 | IP: 79.121.39.242) was kicked for returning a corrupted value on sensitivity (sensitivity), value set at "5,690000" (expected "100.0").
L 10/02/2009 - 17:26:28: Corrupted CVar response: Cali| xlaw (ID: STEAM_0:0:22172000 | IP: 79.121.39.242) was kicked for returning a corrupted value on sensitivity (sensitivity), value set at "5,690000" (expected "100.0").
L 10/02/2009 - 17:27:16: Corrupted CVar response: Cali| xlaw (ID: STEAM_0:0:22172000 | IP: 79.121.39.242) was kicked for returning a corrupted value on sensitivity (sensitivity), value set at "5,690000" (expected "100.0").
Which sensitivity value? What does it for?

Thx

Re: What is this kick?

Posted: Sat Oct 03, 2009 6:49 am
by Kigen
Sensitivity shouldn't have a "," comma in it. Nor should it be over 100.

Re: What is this kick?

Posted: Sat Oct 03, 2009 11:23 am
by KhyrOO
Kigen wrote:Sensitivity shouldn't have a "," comma in it. Nor should it be over 100.
Okay, thx

Re: What is this kick?

Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2010 11:01 am
by Zaivaru
Sorry for bringing up old topic, but what is the point of disallowing using of "," in sensitivity cvar value? Some part of TF2 players just dont know that they should use "." as seperator of sensitivity value between digits, cause "," is decimal seperator in many countries and after they get kicked from server the only reason they see is "Corrupted cvar response". New players even dont worry to find out why they get kicked and simply dont come to server again. I added line "kac_removecvar sensitivity" to server.cfg. Is it ok? Maybe you could explain why this cvar value is so vitallly important that it cant contain "," I tried it and also got kicked - sensitivity 3,5 for example. Typing this in console works just like sensitivity 3.5 so why should i get kicked?

Re: What is this kick?

Posted: Fri Jan 08, 2010 7:52 am
by Rawh
Because in some countries, their numeric value is being seperated by a "," for 1000's. Which in this case would be noted as 1,000.00.

Makes sense, right?