I want to read out the X rotation of my camera.
The Inspector tells me "Rotation X = 10".
I would like to retrieve this value by code.
Therefore I added a script to my player gameobject and assigned the camera as "camera".
Then I used this code:
void Start()
{
Debug.Log("RotX World: " + camera.transform.rotation.x.ToString());
Debug.Log("RotX Local: " + camera.transform.localRotation.x.ToString());
This resulted in the value "0.08715578" instead of "10" (which is displayed by the Inspector).
What am I missing here?
Thank you!
I found the solution, I have to use eulerAngles like this, not camera.transform.rotation.
The correct way to store the rotation would be in a Vector3 like this:
_CameraRot = new Vector3(camera.transform.rotation.eulerAngles.x, camera.transform.rotation.eulerAngles.y, camera.transform.rotation.eulerAngles.z);
I wonder if what the Inspector shows under "Rotation" are actually the eulerAngles?
Related
I'm coding a top down game, with point and click movement. Currently you are able to click on the map, but you can also click outside the map to move there. I added colliders to the walls, but you still try and go outside. Code example:
if (Input.GetMouseButtonDown(1)) {'move'}
But what I want is something like this:
if (Input.GetMouseButtonDown(1) on MAP) //map is the object
So I want to be able to only click on the map, and if you click outside the map, it won't do anything. Thanks!
My script:
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using UnityEngine;
public class PlayerMovement : MonoBehaviour
{
public float speed = 10f;
Vector2 lastClickedPos;
//Rect inRect = new Rect(82.80f, -83.20f, 164.90f, 163.29f);
bool moving;
private void Update()
{
if (Input.GetMouseButtonDown(1) && GameObject.CompareTag("clickedOn")){ // && inRect.Contains(Input.mousePosition)
lastClickedPos = Camera.main.ScreenToWorldPoint(Input.mousePosition);
moving = true;
}
if (moving && (Vector2)transform.position != lastClickedPos)
{
float step = speed * Time.deltaTime;
transform.position = Vector2.MoveTowards(transform.position, lastClickedPos, step);
}
else
{
moving = false;
}
}
}
I think you can resolve your issue using tags or layers. I'll just list how to setup tags since it has a lot less setup vs. doing layers.
First off you'll need to create a tag and since Unity has good documentation on stuff like this I'll just link it here: https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/Tags.html
Once you created your tag and tagged the ground/environment/area you want to have be clickable with the tag then you just need to find the object you want to collided with and use CompareTag so to put that in an example here is what your if statement could look like:
if (Input.GetMouseButtonDown(1) && collidedObject.CompareTag("TagNameGoesHere"))
{
//Movement goes here
}
Just to note I've named the gameObject that was found to collidedObject but you can name it whatever you want.
Hopefully this helps, let me know if I need to clarify something, it has been awhile since I've done a stackoverflow answer so I may have left something out.
Edit: Alright so adding onto this, you'll need to also look into how to do raycasting to check what object you click on so you can determine if it's a spot you can move to.
I've just tested this in a project just to make sure I understand it (I've used raycast a lot but never really done point to click movement before).
Essentially I've broken down things into 3 statements, which you can add together into one if statement but it's more so I can explain everything in detail:
if (Input.GetMouseButtonDown(1))
What you use currently, we want to make sure we only do the next few checks when we click
if (Physics.Raycast(playerCamera.ScreenPointToRay(Input.mousePosition), out hit, Mathf.Infinity))
So this here, is essentially drawing a line from a position, in this bit we are using the player camera which is just a regular camera reference and converting a point on screen into a ray which we then set the length to be Mathf.Infinity (this can be whatever float, I've just used this for an example) and then we output the hit object to hit which is a RaycastHit struct.
if (hit.collider != null && hit.collider.CompareTag("TagNameGoesHere"))
Now we finally check to see if the collider is not null (in case we hit the sky or something, which shouldn't happen for you in a top down game) and also that the object has right tag. Again you need to setup the tags which I've listed above and make sure you set the correct game objects in scene to have the correct tag. After which you should be able to move to the position (using the position you've setup and such is fine)
So it should look something like this:
if (Input.GetMouseButtonDown(1))
{
if (Physics.Raycast(playerCamera.ScreenPointToRay(Input.mousePosition), out rayCastHit, Mathf.Infinity))
{
if (hit.collider != null && hit.collider.CompareTag("TagNameGoesHere"))
{
//Movement goes here
}
}
}
Make sure to also put a reference to the camera and RayCastHit objects (these are the playerCamera and rayCastHit variables in the above). For my example script that I created I made them global variables.
I've been trying to get a script working to check if my player is below a certain Y lvl, for a platformer. so it can be respawned to the beginning, But how do I put the y lvl inside a variable to check it? i cant figure it out lol
In the Update() run something like:
if(player.transform.position.y < 1)
{
//do something
}
where 'player' is the GameObject in question.
I am assuming you want to just want to compare (==, <=, >=, all that jazz is what I mean by comparing just in case you were not aware) the Y value to something like 10 for example. This is easy and you don't even need a variable necessarily for this.
//For the object position relative to the world
if(transform.position.y == 10) //"transform" gives you acces to the transform component
{ //of the object the script is attached to
Debug.Log("MILK GANG");
}
//For the object position relative to its Parent Object
if(transform.localPosition.y == 10)
{
Debug.Log("MILK GANG");
}
If you want to change the value of the position of your object then
transform.position = new Vector2(6, 9)//Nice
//BTW new Vector2 can be used if you dont
//want to assign a completely new variable
However, if you want to get a reference (Basically a variable that tells the code your talking about this component) to it.
private Transform Trans;
void Awake() //Awake is called/being executed before the first frame so its
{ //better than void Start in this case
Trans = GetComponent<Transform>();
Trans.position = new Vector2(69, 420); //Nice
}
This is the code way of doing it but there's another way that uses Unity
[SerializeField] private Transform Trans;
//[SerializeField] makes the variable changeable in Unity even if it is private so you
//can just drag and drop on to this and you good to go
Hope this help
if it doesn't
then welp I tried lel
You can use a script added to gameobject to check transform.position of the object.
if(transform.position.y < ylvl)
{
//do something
}
where ylvl is the integer of the height you want to check
I am able to avoid a collision between my player and my entire plateform with the use of contactFilter2D.SetLayerMask() + rigidBody2D.Cast(Vector2, contactFilter, ...);
But I don't find a way to avoid the collision only if my player try to acces to the plateform from below it (with a vertical jump).
I'm pretty sure I should use the contactFilter2D.setNormalAngle() (after specify the minAngle and maxAngle) but no matter the size of my angles, I can't pass threw it.
This is how I initialize my contactFilter2D.
protected ContactFilter2D cf;
void Start () {
cf.useTriggers = false;
cf.minNormalAngle = 0;
cf.maxNormalAngle = 180;
cf.SetNormalAngle(cf.minNormalAngle, cf.maxNormalAngle);
cf.useNormalAngle = true;
}
void Update () {
}
I use it with
count = rb.Cast(move, contactFilter, hitBuffer, distance + shellRadius);
Any ideas ? If you want more code, tell me. But I don't think it will be usefull to understand the matter.
unity actualy has a ready made component for this: it is a physics component called "Platform Effector 2D" if you drag and drop it on your platform it will immediately work the way you want, and it has adjustable settings for tweaking the parameters. hope this helps!
I've created an arm with a custom pivot in Unity which is essentially supposed to point wherever the mouse is pointing, regardless of the orientation of the player. Now, this arm looks weird when pointed to the side opposite the one it was drawn at, so I use SpriteRenderer.flipY = true to flip the sprite and make it look normal. I also have a weapon at the end of the arm, which is mostly fine as well. Now the problem is that I have a "FirePoint" at the end of the barrel of the weapon, and when the sprite gets flipped the position of it doesn't change, which affects particles and shooting position. Essentially, all that has to happen is that the Y position of the FirePoint needs to become negative, but Unity seems to think that I want the position change to be global, whereas I just want it to be local so that it can work with whatever rotation the arm is at. I've attempted this:
if (rotZ > 40 || rotZ < -40) {
rend.flipY = true;
firePoint.position = new Vector3(firePoint.position.x, firePoint.position.y * -1, firePoint.position.z);
} else {
rend.flipY = false;
firePoint.position = new Vector3(firePoint.position.x, firePoint.position.y * -1, firePoint.position.z);
}
But this works on a global basis rather than the local one that I need. Any help would be much appreciated, and I hope that I've provided enough information for this to reach a conclusive result. Please notify me should you need anything more. Thank you in advance, and have a nice day!
You can use RotateAround() to get desired behaviour instead of flipping stuff around. Here is sample code:
public class ExampleClass : MonoBehaviour
{
public Transform pivotTransform; // need to assign in inspector
void Update()
{
transform.RotateAround(pivotTransform.position, Vector3.up, 20 * Time.deltaTime);
}
}
I have just started unity. I have 4 Images(sprites) aligned in a grid.
As soon as i touch the particular chocolate, its texture changes[I wrote a code for that]. There is a button on screen.After pressing the button, I want to move only those chocolates whose texture has been changed.
I know the following move code but i don't know how to use it here.
void Update () {
float step=speed*Time.deltaTime;
transform.position=Vector3.MoveTowards(transform.position,target.position,step);
}
I just don't know to move that particular sprite whose texture is changed. Thanks
Do you want to be moving the sprites over the course of a duration or instantly?
If it's over the course of a duration I suggest you use Lerp. You can Lerp between two Vector.3's in a time scale. Much cleaner and once learned a very useful function.
Code examples below:
http://docs.unity3d.com/ScriptReference/Vector3.Lerp.html
http://www.blueraja.com/blog/404/how-to-use-unity-3ds-linear-interpolation-vector3-lerp-correctly
However if you want to move it instantly. This can be done very easily using the built in localPosition properties which you can set in or outside the object.
Set your changed sprites Bool moved property (create this) to true on click (if you're using Unity 4.6 UI canvas then look at the IClick interfaces available for registering mouse activity in canvas elements) and then when you press the button, loop through a list in a handler file which contains all your button texture objects and move those that the moved property is set to true for.
foreach(GameObject chocolate in chocolateList)
{
if (chocolate.moved == true)
{
gameObject.transform.localPosition.x = Insert your new x position.
gameObject.transform.localPosition.y = Insert your new y position.
}
}
However please do clarify your intentions so I can help further.
EDIT 1:
I highly suggest you make your sprites an object in the canvas for absolute work clarity. This makes a lot of sense as your canvas can handle these type of things much better. Use Image and assign your image the sprite object (your chocolate piece), define it's width and height and add a script to it called "ChocolatePiece", in this script create two public variables, bool moved and int ID, nothing else is required from this script. Save this new object as your new prefab.
Once you've done this in a handler script attached to an empty gameobject in your canvas make a list of gameobjects:
List<GameObject> chocolatePieces = new List<GameObject>();
You'll want to at the top of your handler script define GameObject chocolatePiece and attach in your inspector the prefab we defined earlier. Then in Start(), loop the size of how many chocolate pieces you want, for your example lets use 4. Instantiate 4 of the prefabs you defined earlier as gameobjects and for each define their properties just like this:
Example variables:
int x = -200;
int y = 200;
int amountToMoveInX = 200;
int amountToMoveInY = 100;
Example instantiation code:
GameObject newPiece = (GameObject)Instantiate(chocolatePiece);
chocolatePieces.Add(newPiece);
newPiece.GetComponent<ChocolatePiece>().ID = i;
newPiece.transform.SetParent(gameObject.transform, false);
newPiece.name = ("ChocolatePiece" + i);
newPiece.GetComponent<RectTransform>().localPosition = new Vector3(x, y, 0);
From this point add to your positions (x by amountToMoveInX and y by amountToMoveInY) for the next loop count;
(For the transform.position, each count of your loop add an amount on to a default x and default y value (the position of your first piece most likely))
Now because you have all your gameobjects in a list with their properties properly set you can then access these gameobjects through your handler script.