Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
It's pretty clear to me that they do differentiate, even if there is no specific separate categories. There's not much point in arguing that here, though, because the weapon is not a part of the spell effect of True Strike. It's a component only, specifically used in the spells casting, which is different from being part of the spell(the effect). Then if you make an attack with that component, you can apply the effect of radiant damage if you so choose.Well, they differentiate between spells and attacks. Some spells have you make one or more attacks as part of their resolution, and those are spell attacks. But, again, “spell attacks” and “weapon attacks” (not “melee attacks,” but “weapon attacks”) used to be distinct categories that the rules referenced and cared about. They aren’t any more. There are attacks you make with weapons, and there are attacks you make as part of casting spells, the latter of which use your spell attack modifier, and either of which can be melee or ranged. But weapon attack and spell attack no longer exist as distinct Rules Objects. They’re just concepts expressed via natural language.
"COMPONENTS
A spell's components are physical requirements the spellcaster must meet to cast the spell. Each spell's description indicates whether it requires Verbal (V), Somatic (S ), or Material (M) comp onents. If the spellcaster can't provide one or more of a spell's components, the spellcaster can't cast the spell."
As you can see, components are requirements to be met in order to cast the spell, not part of the spell itself.