Reader small image

You're reading from  Unity Cookbook - Fifth Edition

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2023
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781805123026
Edition5th Edition
Languages
Tools
Right arrow
Authors (3):
Shaun Ferns
Shaun Ferns
author image
Shaun Ferns

Shaun is a lecturer at Technological University Dublin. He is currently teaching on the BA (Hons) in Creative Digital Media where he is lead in the delivery of the Multimedia Stream. He is currently exploring serious games for construction-related training as well as the opportunities transmedia provides in improving user experience and engagement in cultural archive artifacts. His educational research is currently driven by his interest in self-determined learning (heutagogy), rhizomatic learning theory, micro-credentialing /digital badging, and curriculum development.
Read more about Shaun Ferns

Sinéad Murphy
Sinéad Murphy
author image
Sinéad Murphy

Sinead Murphy is currently Data Analytics Manager for the Irish NGO Trocaire. She has over 25 years of computing experience, including freelance IT training and database consulting, university lecturing in mathematics, IT skills and programming at TU Dublin (Ireland) and Middlesex University (London). She is a published academic, with undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in mathematics, computing and data science. She is passionate about the use of IT for understanding and visualising data, and using that understanding to make meaningful differences in the world. She is currently exploring the use of Python and Unity for data analytics and interactive visualisations.
Read more about Sinéad Murphy

View More author details
Right arrow

Creating an Editor snap-to-grid drawn by a gizmo

If the positions of objects need to be restricted to specific increments, it is useful to have a grid drawn in the Scene panel to help ensure that new objects are positioned based on those values, as well as code to snap objects to that grid.

In this recipe, we’ll use gizmos to draw a grid with a customizable grid size, color, number of lines, and line length. The result of following this recipe will look as follows:

Figure 19.3: Example of a visible grid to which objects have been snapped

How to do it...

To create an Editor snap-to-grid drawn by a gizmo, follow these steps:

  1. Create a new Unity 3D project.
  2. In the Scene panel, turn off the Skybox view (or simply toggle off all the visual settings) so that you have a plain background for your grid:

Figure 19.4: Turning off the Skybox view in the Scene panel

  1. Updating the display and the child objects will be performed...
lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Unity Cookbook - Fifth Edition
Published in: Nov 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781805123026

Authors (3)

author image
Shaun Ferns

Shaun is a lecturer at Technological University Dublin. He is currently teaching on the BA (Hons) in Creative Digital Media where he is lead in the delivery of the Multimedia Stream. He is currently exploring serious games for construction-related training as well as the opportunities transmedia provides in improving user experience and engagement in cultural archive artifacts. His educational research is currently driven by his interest in self-determined learning (heutagogy), rhizomatic learning theory, micro-credentialing /digital badging, and curriculum development.
Read more about Shaun Ferns

author image
Sinéad Murphy

Sinead Murphy is currently Data Analytics Manager for the Irish NGO Trocaire. She has over 25 years of computing experience, including freelance IT training and database consulting, university lecturing in mathematics, IT skills and programming at TU Dublin (Ireland) and Middlesex University (London). She is a published academic, with undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in mathematics, computing and data science. She is passionate about the use of IT for understanding and visualising data, and using that understanding to make meaningful differences in the world. She is currently exploring the use of Python and Unity for data analytics and interactive visualisations.
Read more about Sinéad Murphy