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You're reading from  Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity - Seventh Edition

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Published inNov 2022
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781837636877
Edition7th Edition
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Harrison Ferrone
Harrison Ferrone
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Harrison Ferrone

Harrison Ferrone is an instructional content creator for LinkedIn Learning and Pluralsight, tech editor for the Ray Wenderlich website, and used to write technical documentation on the Mixed Reality team at Microsoft. He is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia College, Chicago. After a few years as an iOS developer at small start-ups, and one Fortune 500 company, he fell into a teaching career and never looked back.
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Working with the Unity physics system

Up to this point, we haven’t talked about how the Unity engine works, or how it manages to create lifelike interactions and movement in a virtual space. We’ll spend the rest of this chapter learning the basics of Unity’s physics system.

The two main components that power Unity’s NVIDIA PhysX engine are as follows:

  • Rigidbody components, which allow GameObjects to be affected by gravity and add properties such as Mass and Drag. Rigidbody components can also be affected by an applied force if they have a Collider component attached, which generates more realistic movement:
Graphical user interface, text, application  Description automatically generated

Figure 7.6: Rigidbody component in the Inspector pane

  • Collider components, which determine how and when GameObjects enter and exit each other’s physical space or simply collide and bounce away. While there should only be one Rigidbody component attached to a given GameObject, there can be several Collider...
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Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity - Seventh Edition
Published in: Nov 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781837636877

Author (1)

author image
Harrison Ferrone

Harrison Ferrone is an instructional content creator for LinkedIn Learning and Pluralsight, tech editor for the Ray Wenderlich website, and used to write technical documentation on the Mixed Reality team at Microsoft. He is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia College, Chicago. After a few years as an iOS developer at small start-ups, and one Fortune 500 company, he fell into a teaching career and never looked back.
Read more about Harrison Ferrone