My Problem:
I cant get it to work, that every Building has its own SpawnPoint.
I'm working on an RTS like build mechanism. I have set it up that after pressing a key I can place buildings in the scene. The buildings get instantiated from a prefab and after they get instantiated they get a script called "BuildingScript" attached to them. Now i want to implement, so that i get a individual spawn point for every building (for now just next to it). I got a UI set up with a button, which by pressing spawns a unit at the building.
I had the "BuildingScript" attached to the prefab, but when i set the spawn point for one Building, it set it for every Building in the Scene. So a Unit was Spawned always at the same Buidling.
I want to set it up, that every Building has its own spawn point. Thats why I want to give every Building the script "BuildingScript" when Instatiated, because I hope, that this way every script gets handled individually. Is that right? Or will it still set the same point for every building, because the script is still the same?
Also I wanna reference the current placed building to the button, so when its clicked, it will run only the code of the last placed building (for now). I think I cant do this by using "On Click()" Of the Button, because my clone isnt Instatiated yet, so I have to reference the clone to the button somehow via Script, so the button works with the clone.So my problem is, that I need to set a reference from my cloned Building to the Button, after I placed the clone.
I googled a lot on how to do this, but didnt found any answers to my problem besides this https://forum.unity.com/threads/controlling-instantiated-game-objects-from-ui-buttons.332005/.
But I cant get it to work and I think it will not work because my clone is an Object and not a GameObject, so I could never set reference to it to call the funktion SpawnUnit(), because GetComponent only works for a GameObject.
Now I'm really at a point where I just don't know how Unity handles these kind of things.
BuildingScript on the Instantiated Building
public class BuildingScript : MonoBehaviour
{
public bool SavePos = false;
public Vector3 SpawnPoint;
public Vector3 BuildingPos;
public GameObject Unit;
void Start()
{
FindObjectOfType<SpawnButtonReference>().GiveReference(this);
}
public void SpawnUnit()
{
//I did this because if a building gets instatiated i wanted it to save its
Position to Spawn Units from it (doesnt really work though).
"MousePos" ist the last Position of the Mouse in the PlacementScript, before klicking to place the building.
if (SavePos == false)
{
BuildingPos = GameObject.FindObjectOfType<GroundPlacementController>().GetComponent<GroundPlacementController>().MousePos;
Debug.Log(BuildingPos);
SavePos = true;
}
float PosX = BuildingPos.x + 2;
float PosZ = BuildingPos.z + 2;
SpawnPoint = new Vector3(PosX, 0, PosZ);
Debug.Log("Spawn" + SpawnPoint);
Instantiate(Unit, SpawnPoint, Quaternion.identity);
}
}
Script on the Button
public class SpawnButtonReference : MonoBehaviour
{
public GameObject objectReference = null;
internal void GiveReference(BuildingScript Object)
{
objectReference = Object;
}
void OnButtonPress()
{
if (objectReference != null)
{
objectReference.GetComponent<BuildingScript>().SpawnUnit();
}
}
}
So I solved it myself with a little workaround. Instead of trying to reference the clone, I wrote a script on the Spawn Button which searches all Objects with the "BildingScript" then if they are Selected (which can only be one Building) it spawns a Unit at its Spawn point.
The Building itself saves his spawn point when being placed (so when Input.GetMouseButtonUp(0))
works very well for me :)
I'm making/want to make a bullet-hell game where there are essentially two players, each own their own identical copy of a map competition for the high score. And the game ends whenever a player dies.
I have all of this working in multiplayer, but my approach seems a bit hacky, so I'm wondering if there's a better way for me to accomplish this.
At first I was using just unity's network manager, and in my player Start() function I checked if(!isLocal), and if so I set the gameObject enabled to false. This worked great, but like I said, felt a little hacky.
Example of the code:
if (!isLocalPlayer) {
gameObject.SetActive(false);
return;
}
Next I moved to unity's LobbyManager. This is where things got really sticky. Now on the Host, the game loads fine, but on the client, only one game object is created, and it's set as disabled which leads me to believe that it is the 'enemy' or not local player object.
I slowly figured out that the cause of this was setting the enemy game object active to false. If I left it true, both players would spawn on both screens. My solution now is to not disable the enemy player object, but every component on it so it doesn't get in the way.
Again this feels very hacky, and like it could lead to problems down the road. Is this really the best option, or am I missing something obvious?
Example of the Code:
if (!isLocalPlayer) {
gameObject.GetComponent<MeshRenderer>().enabled = false;
gameObject.GetComponent<BoxCollider>().enabled = false;
gameObject.GetComponent<CharacterController>().enabled = false;
gameObject.GetComponent<PlayerController>().enabled = false;
gameObject.GetComponent<Rigidbody>().detectCollisions = false;
guns = gameObject.GetComponentsInChildren<MeshRenderer>();
foreach (MeshRenderer gun in guns) {
gun.enabled = false;
}
}
Thanks in advance! Sorry this is so long, hopefully it isn't a chore to read.
Make an empty scene with nothing but a score manager and what else you need to transfer.
Have another scene as an asset in your project folder, this is where the map is.
When a player joins, have them join the scene with the score manager.
If they also are the local player, they should load the map scene.
That way, both players will be in the same scene while also having their own instance of the map.
You can load scenes in asynchronously and additively, which would be ideal for your situation.
I am using two different objects for player in network multiplayer game. Two different kinds of Gameobject will be instantiated by unity network Manager but the problem is there is only single property of playerprefab. How can i set two different objects even i tried to change it on run time but its giving me error.
Failed to spawn server object,
assetId=4d293c8e162f3874b982baadd71153d2 netId=1
UnityEngine.Networking.NetworkIdentity:UNetStaticUpdate()
Failed to spawn server object,
assetId=4d293c8e162f3874b982baadd71153d2 netId=7
UnityEngine.Networking.NetworkIdentity:UNetStaticUpdate()
In the documentation of UNetManager:
if you want to customize the way player GameObjects are created, you can override that virtual function. This code shows an example of the default implementation:
public virtual void OnServerAddPlayer(NetworkConnection conn, short playerControllerId)
{
var player = (GameObject)GameObject.Instantiate(playerPrefab, playerSpawnPos, Quaternion.identity);
NetworkServer.AddPlayerForConnection(conn, player, playerControllerId);
}
You could change the prefab inside that code to the prefab you want to spawn.
Hope this helps you with your problem of choosing which prefab.
I'm making simple game manager. I have a script, which will be accessible from all scenes in the game. And I need to check values of its variables after loading new scene. But my code runs only once after starting the simulation while an object with this script exists in all scenes. What is wrong? Why doesn't it work after loading a new scene?
In every Unity project you must have A PRELOAD SCENE.
It is quite confusing that Unity does not have a preload scene "built-in".
They will add this concept in the future.
Fort now you have to click to add a preload scene yourself.
This is the SINGLE GREATEST MISUNDERSTANDING for new programmers trying Unity!
Fortunately, it is extremely easy to have a preload scene.
Step 1.
Make a scene named "preload". It must be scene 0 in Build Manager.
Step 2.
In the "preload" scene make an empty GameObject called, say, "__app".
Simply, put DontDestroyOnLoad on '__app'.
Note:
This is the only place in the whole project you use DontDestroyOnLoad.
It's that simple.
In the example: the developers have made a one-line DDOL script.
Put that script on the "__app" object.
You never have to think about DDOL again.
Step 3
Your app will have (many) "general behaviors". So, things like database connectivity, sound effects, scoring, and so on.
You must, and can only, put your general behaviors on "_app".
It's really that simple.
The general behaviors are then - of course - available everywhere in the project, at all times, and in all scenes.
How else could you do it?
In the image example above, notice "Iap" ("in-app purchase") and the others.
All of your "generally-needed behaviors" - sound effects, scoring, and so on - are right there on that object.
Important...
This means that - of course, naturally -
...your general behaviors will have ordinary Inspectors, just like everything else in Unity.
You can use all the usual features of Unity, which you use on every other game object. Inspector variables, drag to connect, settings, and so on.
(Indeed: say you've been hired to work on an existing project. The first thing you will do, is glance at the preload scene. You will see all the "general behaviors" in the preload scene - sound effects, scoring, AI, etc etc. You will instantly see all the settings for those things as Inspector variables ... speech volume, playstore ID, etc etc.)
Here's an example "Sound effects" general behavior:
Looks like there's also a "voice over" general behavior, and a "music" general behavior".
To repeat. Regarding your "general behaviors". (Sound effects, scoring, social, etc etc.) These CAN ONLY GO on a game object in the preload scene.
This is not optional: there's no alternative!
It's that easy.
Sometimes engineers coming from other environments get caught up on this, because it seems like "it can't be that easy".
To repeat, Unity just plain forgot to "build-in" a preload scene. So, you simply click to add your preload scene. Don't forget to add the DDOL.
So, during development:
Always start your game from Preload scene.
It's that simple.
Important: Your app will certainly have "early" scenes. Examples:
"splash screen"
"menu"
Note. Tou CAN NOT use splash or menu as the preload scene. You have to literally have a separate preload scene.
The preload scene will then load your splash or menu or other early scene.
The central issue: "finding" those from other scripts:
So you have a preload scene.
All of your "general behaviors" are simply on the preload scene.
You next have the problem of, quite simply, finding say "SoundEffects".
You have to be able to find them easily, from, any script, on any game object, in any of your scenes.
Fortunately it is dead easy, it is one line of code.
Sound sound = Object.FindObjectOfType<Sound>();
Game game = Object.FindObjectOfType<Game>();
Do that in Awake, for any script that needs it.
It's honestly that simple. That's all there is to it.
Sound sound = Object.FindObjectOfType<Sound>();
Tremendous confusion arises because of the 100s of absolutely wrong code examples seen online.
It really is that easy - honest!
It's bizarre that Unity forgot to add a built-in "preload scene" - somewhere to attach your systems like SoundEffects, GameManager, etc. It's just one of those weird thing about Unity. So, the first thing you do in any Unity project is just click once to make a preload scene.
That's it!
A Detail...
Note that, if you really want to type even less (!) lines of code, it's remarkably easy - you can just use a global for each of these things!
This is explained in detail here , many folks now use something like this, a Grid.cs script ...
using Assets.scripts.network;
using UnityEngine;
static class Grid
{
public static Comms comms;
public static State state;
public static Launch launch;
public static INetworkCommunicator iNetworkCommunicator;
public static Sfx sfx;
static Grid()
{
GameObject g = GameObject.Find("_app");
comms = g.GetComponent<Comms>();
state = g.GetComponent<State>();
launch = g.GetComponent<Launch>();
iNetworkCommunicator = g.GetComponent<INetworkCommunicator>();
sfx = g.GetComponent<Sfx>();
}
}
Then, anywhere in the project you can say
Grid.sfx.Explosions();
It's just that easy, that's the whole thing.
Don't forget that each of those "general systems" is on, and can only be on, the DDOL game object in the preload scene.
DylanB asks: "During development it's quite annoying that you have to click to the preload scene every time before you click "Play". Can this be automated?"
Sure, every team has a different way to do this. Here's a trivial example:
// this should run absolutely first; use script-execution-order to do so.
// (of course, normally never use the script-execution-order feature,
// this is an unusual case, just for development.)
...
public class DevPreload:MonoBehaviour
{
void Awake()
{
GameObject check = GameObject.Find("__app");
if (check==null)
{ UnityEngine.SceneManagement.SceneManager.LoadScene("_preload"); }
}
}
But don't forget: what else can you do? Games have to start from a preload scene. What else can you do, other than click to go to the preload scene, to start the game? One may as well ask "it's annoying launching Unity to run Unity - how to avoid launching Unity?!" Games simply, of course, absolutely have to start from a preload scene - how else could it be? So sure, you have to "click to the preload scene before you click Play" when working in Unity - how else could it be?
#Fattie: Thanks for elaborating all this, it's great! There is a point though that people are trying to get through to you, and I'll just give it a go as well:
We do not want every instantiation of everything in our mobile games to do a "FindObjectOfType" for each and every every "global class"!
Instead you can just have it use an Instantiation of a static / a Singleton right away, without looking for it!
And it's as simple as this:
Write this in what class you want to access from anywhere, where XXXXX is the name of the class, for example "Sound"
public static XXXXX Instance { get; private set; }
void Awake()
{
if (Instance == null) { Instance = this; } else { Debug.Log("Warning: multiple " + this + " in scene!"); }
}
Now instead of your example
Sound sound = Object.FindObjectOfType<Sound>();
Just simply use it, without looking, and no extra variables, simply like this, right off from anywhere:
Sound.Instance.someWickedFunction();
Alternately (technically identical), just use one global class, usually called Grid, to "hold" each of those. Howto. So,
Grid.sound.someWickedFunction();
Grid.networking.blah();
Grid.ai.blah();
Here is how you can start whatever scene you like and be sure to reintegrate your _preload scene every time you hit play button in unity editor. There is new attribute available since Unity 2017 RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethod, more about it here.
Basically you have a simple plane c# class and a static method with RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethod on it. Now every time you start the game, this method will load the preload scene for you.
using UnityEngine;
using UnityEngine.SceneManagement;
public class LoadingSceneIntegration {
#if UNITY_EDITOR
public static int otherScene = -2;
[RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethod(RuntimeInitializeLoadType.BeforeSceneLoad)]
static void InitLoadingScene()
{
Debug.Log("InitLoadingScene()");
int sceneIndex = SceneManager.GetActiveScene().buildIndex;
if (sceneIndex == 0) return;
Debug.Log("Loading _preload scene");
otherScene = sceneIndex;
//make sure your _preload scene is the first in scene build list
SceneManager.LoadScene(0);
}
#endif
}
Then in your _preload scene you have another script who will load back desired scene (from where you have started):
...
#if UNITY_EDITOR
private void Awake()
{
if (LoadingSceneIntegration.otherScene > 0)
{
Debug.Log("Returning again to the scene: " + LoadingSceneIntegration.otherScene);
SceneManager.LoadScene(LoadingSceneIntegration.otherScene);
}
}
#endif
...
An alternate solution from May 2019 without _preload:
https://low-scope.com/unity-tips-1-dont-use-your-first-scene-for-global-script-initialization/
I've paraphrased from the above blog to a how-to for it below:
Loading a Static Resource Prefab for all Scenes
In Project > Assets create a folder called Resources.
Create a Main Prefab from an empty GameObject and place in the Resources folder.
Create a Main.cs C# script in your Assets > Scripts or wherever.
using UnityEngine;
public class Main : MonoBehaviour
{
// Runs before a scene gets loaded
[RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethod(RuntimeInitializeLoadType.BeforeSceneLoad)]
public static void LoadMain()
{
GameObject main = GameObject.Instantiate(Resources.Load("Main")) as GameObject;
GameObject.DontDestroyOnLoad(main);
}
// You can choose to add any "Service" component to the Main prefab.
// Examples are: Input, Saving, Sound, Config, Asset Bundles, Advertisements
}
Add Main.cs to the Main Prefab in your Resources folder.
Note how it uses RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethod along with Resources.Load("Main") and DontDestroyOnLoad.
Attach any other scripts that need to be global across scenes to this prefab.
Note that if you link to other scene game objects to those scripts you probably want to use something like this in the Start function for those scripts:
if(score == null)
score = FindObjectOfType<Score>();
if(playerDamage == null)
playerDamage = GameObject.Find("Player").GetComponent<HitDamage>();
Or better yet, use an Asset management system like Addressable Assets or the Asset Bundles.
actually as a programmer who comes to unity world I see none of these approaches
standard
the most simplest and standard way: create a prefab, according to unity docs:
Unity’s Prefab system allows you to create, configure, and store a GameObject complete with all its components, property values, and child GameObjects
as a reusable Asset. The Prefab Asset acts as a template from which you can create new Prefab instances in the Scene.
Details:
Create a prefab within your Resources folder:
if you don't know how to create a prefab study this unity document
if you don't have resources directory create a folder and name it exactly Resources because it is a unity Special folder name
create a script with contents like below:
using UnityEngine;
public class Globals : MonoBehaviour // change Globals (it should be the same name of your script)
{
// loads before any other scene:
[RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethod(RuntimeInitializeLoadType.BeforeSceneLoad)]
public static void LoadMain()
{
Debug.Log("i am before everything else");
}
}
assign it to your prefab
and you can make it even better:
use prefab and namespaces together:
in your prefab script:
using UnityEngine;
namespace Globals {
public class UserSettings
{
static string language = "per";
public static string GetLanguage()
{
return language;
}
public static void SetLanguage (string inputLang)
{
language = inputLang;
}
}
}
in your other scripts:
using Globals;
public class ManageInGameScene : MonoBehaviour
{
void Start()
{
string language = UserSettings.GetLanguage();
}
void Update()
{
}
}
I am making a small 2d click'n'point in Unity, and what I want to do is: I want to move towards the door and when my Player steps on a game Object with an attached SceneSwitcher Script he shall go through the door, into another scene. That works fine so far. Now I don't want him to appear in the middle of the room, but on the door, where he entered the room.
using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;
using PixelCrushers.DialogueSystem;
public class ScenSwitcher : MonoBehaviour {
public string SceneName = "";
void OnTriggerEnter2D(Collider2D other) {
SwitchScene();
}
void SwitchScene(){
LevelManager levelManager = DialogueManager.Instance.GetComponent<LevelManager>();
levelManager.LoadLevel (SceneName);
changePosition ();
Debug.Log ("Scene Wechseln nach: " + SceneName);
}
void changePosition(){
GameObject player = GameObject.Find("Player");
player.transform.position = new Vector3(12,12,0);
}
}
That is my code, it does change Scenes, but not change the position. I would appreciate any help :)
On your ChangePosition() method you are passing hardcoded values to player position and it will assume always (12,12,0) on your scene space.
You need to define a spawn manager where you will get dynamically witch spawn point in your scene you want to use.
edited:
1: Try to create a singleton GameManager ( you can find singleton pattern examples here ) (IMPORTANT: Add DontDestroyOnLoad on your GameManager Awake).
2: In your GameManager define a Vector3 NextPosition property or something like this.
3: Declare a public Vector3 Destination on your "teleport" script to set it per teleport on inspector/editor.
4: Before this line levelManager.LoadLevel (SceneName) of code set GameManager.NextPosition = this.Destination;
5: If you are not persisting your character between scenes just call on one of hes behaviours Awake() or, if he persists create a method void OnLevelWasLoaded(int level) and chage players position setting GameManager.NextPosition ( wisely testing if it is valid for the current level before ;) ).
I cant try or do better coding now because I don't have access to unity editor so I hope it helps at last start a good research to solve your problem =/.
I would think the loadLevel function destroys the current script so changePosition does not get executed? I could be wrong.
Even if it is getting executed, there is a good chance it is executed before the level load and the properties for the next scene override where it got moved to.
I forget the exact syntax but look into getting GameObjects to not be destroyed on scene change.
EDIT
Object.DontDestroyOnLoad