Having multiple unity scenes open simultaneously - unity3d

I've been developing a board-style game in Unity3D. The main scene is the board, and has the data about each player and the current (randomly-generated) board stored within it.
I intend to add minigames into the game, for example when landing on a particular space on the board. Naturally, I would like to code the minigame in a separate scene. Is there a way I can do this without losing the instance of the current scene, so that the current scene's state is maintained?
Thanks in advance :)

Short answer: no, but there may be another way to do what you want.
A basic call to Application.LoadLevel call will destroy the current scene before loading the next one. This isn't what you want.
If your minigame is relatively simple, you could use Instantiate to bring in a prefab and spawn it far away from the rest of your scene. You can even use scripts to switch to another camera, toggle player controls and other interactions in the scene, and so on. Once the minigame is done, you can destroy or disable whatever you brought in, and re-enable whatever needs to be turned on in the main scene.
You could create a separate scene and call Application.LoadLevelAdditive to load that scene without destroying the current one. As above, you can then use scripts to manage which cameras and scene behaviors are active.
If you're careful, you don't really need two separate scenes. It may be enough to "fake" a scene switch.

Hard to give a complete answer without code, but you should look into the following things either with the unity documentation or youtube:
PlayerPrefs, this is one way of saving data, although i believe it isn't entirely secure i.e. being able to edit from a text file.
Serializable, this is apparently better than playerprefs.
DonDestroyOnLoad, can carry over information to multiple scenes.
Static variables, again not sure if this will help your particular problem.

Related

How should I handle a multiple scenes project?

I'm trying to make this game using the approach of multiple scenes to make things more modular.
In my actual case I have an "Initialization" scene which holds some global state objects and the one to control the state machine of all the scenes in the game.
As for the other scenes, for now I divided them just in two: the base scenes (which for now contains everything besides UI) and its UI scenes (which basically have a Canvas and all the UI elements and UI-related scripts).
The confusion in my mind is simple though: as I tried to make the UI scenes as modular and independent as possible, there are a lot of points of interactions between the base scene and its UI scene.
For the sake of illustrating this question please take this problem I'm facing right now: I have camera animations that should be played as a response to user inputs to the UI (like the click of a button should trigger a specific camera animation). Thing is: that camera is not in the UI scene. The way I'm resolving this problem right now is creating a ScriptableObject which holds events for important actions triggered in the UI scene that are fired in the UI scene and subscribed in any other place. The same can occur in the opposite direction: the UI scene need to react to many actions that happens in other scenes.
Considering that the "camera animation" problem I explained above can happen with many other objects, if there is not a better way to handle that wouldn't splitting a game into multiple scenes be just too much of work just for the benefit of modularity? And by that I also asks: am I handling this problem the right way?
If you want to keep things consistent between scenes, there are a few ways to do it.
PlayerPrefs lets you keep variables consistent, I don't need to do a whole tutorial here, look it up.
DontDestroyOnLoad lets you take an object and make it consistent throughout the whole game. If you want, you can use DontDestroyOnLoad on one of your cameras and just delete the others in the other scenes if you want to keep a consistent camera.

How can I access an object's components from a different scene?

I have a Player gameObject that has a script on it which keeps some variables inside it. I created a scene which acts as a main menu and has "Shop" part in it, which has upgrades in it, basically I need to access Player gameObject's script from a different scene so I can modify variables from main menu scene. How can I do that ?
check this out:
https://docs.unity3d.com/ScriptReference/Object.DontDestroyOnLoad.html
once your player is loaded this will keep him in every scene until you choose to release hiim, meaning when you load your menu scene he will be there to access.
now since we know hes there, we can:
(note that player is your script with the variables not your actual player)
ScriptName player = GameObject.FindObjectWithTag("yourtag").GetComponent<ScriptName>();
Be default the components are instances of a class. If there isn't a GameObject with that component in the currently loaded scenes, there is nothing to access.
If I recall you can now load more than one scene at a time.
If there is a GameObject with that script currently loaded you can use:
https://docs.unity3d.com/ScriptReference/Object.FindObjectsOfType.html
or even better
use singleton design pattern, in case you have only 1 player at a time.
I guess you want to save these upgrades for the next run of the game, so you can use PlayerPrefs
https://docs.unity3d.com/ScriptReference/PlayerPrefs.html
If you want to save more than 50 values of data I would suggest using a file based DB like SQLite, it takes little time to setup and works very fast. And it is a lot more readable than using PlayerPrefs.
How about static class?
You can keep values there and access it from any place you want :D

Using unity animations globaly

I am trying to code an end for a level in a simple game. A lot of things need to happen at slightly different times. The character needs to do a celebration. Text needs to pop up on screen. The camera needs to move to show off the win, and finally there needs to be a scene transition.
This all seems like a great thing to solve with an animation. All these things could come in and act on specific key-frames, at the end raising an event and ending the scene.
The problem is it looks like animations have to be attached to specific objects. My camera, player, and the static global GameController are completely unrelated. In fact the global controller can't be related to anything. Because of that my animations don't see all the objects and can't control them. I am instead stuck writing synchronized animations, and code with a lot of yield return new WaitForSeconds(...);. I find this very difficult to manage, and seems like a lot of waste. Is there any way I can use animations, or some other frame based tool to globally animate my game?
Look into Unity's Timeline system. I believe this is exactly the sort of thing it was made for.

Switch between scenes but keep player position when comes back?

My game will switch between two scenes : scene A and scene B;
scene A is a world where the hero can walk around and trigger battles;
scene B is the battle scene;
when the battle finished, I want to turn back to scene A and hero should be in the position where it trigger battles. So I need to save scene A before I load scene B;
I tried the api LoadSceneMode.Additive; But it's just used to mix one scene to the current loaded scenes.
Could you help me plz?
Firstly DO NOT use "additive". Just use ordinary scene load.
Secondly you have the problem of "remembering" where the guy was when sceneA loads.
Your easiest approach to get you going .. learn about PlayerPrefs.
Just before you quite sceneA, save the hero's position. When you load sceneA, get the hero's position.
Alternately you can use one static class as a sort of global to keep track of the info. But to do that you have to learn about writing that sort of code.
Be aware that what you're doing is not that easy - Unity is a lot harder than it says on the box.
I encourage you to master PlayerPrefs in the first instance, because you will have to use it all the time anyway.

Understanding scenes in Unity3d

I have some confusion with scenes in Unity3d and I was not able to find any resources about them.
When should scenes be used? For example in a platformer would every level have to be a different scene? Would the main menu be a scene?
Can one overlay scenes?
How do assets work between scenes? Are they attached to each individual scene and have to be reloaded every time. Can one specify when an asset is no longer needed?
How does one send data between scenes/interface between scenes?
I understand that this is a broad topic, but I didn't want to spam with multiple questions.
When should scenes be used? For example in a platformer would every
level have to be a different scene? Would the main menu be a scene?
There are no general rules about that. In theory you may have just one scene for the whole game.
How you organize your scenes is entirely up to you and often depends on the type of game you are creating.
I think that there are at least 3 features to be considered of using scenes:
they are a logical container for all pre-instantiated objects that might be useful to divide your game into multiple levels/sections.
You can serialize cross references between GameObjects and Components inside a scene (if GO A needs a ref to GO B, and they belong to the same scene, the reference can be serialized and you no longer need to find the referenced object at runtime)
When you load (not in an additive way) another scene, the resources already loaded into memory are automatically released
Can one overlay scenes?
Yes you can using LoadAdditive. Unfortunately, once 2 scenes are both loaded into memory there is no automatic way of distinguish objects belonging to one or the other. So if you load additive a second level environment, it's up to you to keep track of the previous environment and explicitly destroy it if you need to.
How do assets work between scenes? Are they attached to each
individual scene and have to be reloaded every time. Can one specify
when an asset is no longer needed?
As defaults every GameObject of a scene will be destroyed once the new scene is loaded (unless you use an additive scene loading). A way to make a GameObject survive across scenes is to mark it using DontDestroyOnLoad.
If you need to share a particular "configuration" of a GameObject, you can store it as a prefab, and reference it across scenes (but remember that once in a scene it's a prefab instance, so the GO shares with the prefab the initial serialized and not overriden properties, but 2 instances of the same prefab are different objects).
How does one send data between scenes/interface between scenes?
Several ways, depending on what kind of persistent data you want to share.
For a particular GameObject instance let the object survive using DontDestroyOnLoad.
If you have some configuration data that doesn't need to be attached to a specific GameObject you can consider storing a ScriptableObject inside the AssetDatabase and reference it.
If you have data that must persist across different game sessions you can consider storing them into PlayerPrefs.
There are 2 other ways that I don't like, but just to cite them:
Using a static field can sometimes help you in doing that, but it has several problems from my point of view
Save and load from disk (could be useful in several situations, but often it's a platform dependent way and you can have some trouble especially on different mobile platforms)
This is a broad topic btw, I hope this answer can be a quite decent overview.
When should scenes be used? For example in a platformer would every level have to be a different scene? Would the main menu be a scene?
There is no rule as to how many scenes you need to have in your game. However, scenes allow you to logically separate out parts of your game from the rest of it. You have to have a minimum of one scene.
By main menu, if you are referring to a canvas with your UI elements, it will be IN a scene and not a scene itself. Canvas is just another GameObject, that we mostly happen to use for showing game menus. I mostly create a Canvas GameObject, put a script by the name of "UIManager" and put DontDestroyOnLoad on it, so I have access to it in all scenes. Make it Singleton and I ensure that it is not duplicated.
Can one overlay scenes?
Yes, there is no restriction as to how many scenes you can load at a time. What purpose do you plan to overlay scenes though? Maybe there is a better way than loading additively.
How do assets work between scenes? Are they attached to each individual scene and have to be reloaded every time. Can one specify when an asset is no longer needed?
Assets are what you see in your 'project' hierarchy. I think you meant "GameObject"s in the scene, and if so, think of your gameobjects as entities with components (Entity-Component System). All entities in a scene get destroyed when its parent scene is destroyed until explicitly stated not to, using DontDestroyOnLoad in some component (a monobehavior in case of unity). The destroyed ones will get garbage collected.
So how they are loaded (or reloaded) depends on your implementation, on whether you are instantiating/destroying them time an again or if you put their instantiated prefabs in a cached object and retrieving later from it.
How does one send data between scenes/interface between scenes?
Heisen covered the ones I could think of. Just to add a little bit to it, it also depends on how you want to the architect your project. So if you had an underlying data structure to e.g. hold Commands, you are free to use it in any part of your project
Most games would be organised to have scenes for every level(including the main menu) but that is entirely up to you.
You can use the data from one scene to another if you save it in a text file or binary. There are a lot of tutorials on how to do this. I find documentation helps a lot.
Assets are universal in a project.
You can not overlay scenes.
When should scenes be used? For example in a platformer would every level have to be a different scene? Would the main menu be a scene?
When to use a scene is up to you. If you are just starting I would recommend using a different scene for each section of your game.
Can one overlay scenes?
Yes, using LoadSceneMode.Additive(). (LoadAdditive() is obsolete)
How do assets work between scenes? Are they attached to each individual scene and have to be reloaded every time. Can one specify when an asset is no longer needed?
By default, assets are deleted when using SceneManager.LoadScene(). However, if you use DontDestroyOnLoad(), the object will not be destroyed when entering new scenes. If you want to only keep an object through a few scenes instead of all, use Destroy() with some boolean logic.
How does one send data between scenes/interface between scenes? I understand that this is a broad topic, but I didn't want to spam with multiple questions.
You can send data through scenes by using the aforementioned DontDestroyOnLoad(), referencing the data on different scripts, using ScriptableObjects, using JSON Serialization, using StreamWriter(), using PlayerPrefs (Don't use for important information), the list goes on. I would personally recommend using ScriptableObjects for their accessibility, and StreamWriter() for it's encryption capabilities.