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You're reading from  Unity 5.x Game AI Programming Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inMar 2016
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781783553570
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Jorge Palacios
Jorge Palacios
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Jorge Palacios

Jorge Palacios is a software and game developer with a BS in computer science and eight years of professional experience. He's been developing games for the last five years in different roles, from tool developer to lead programmer. Mainly focused on artificial intelligence and gameplay programming, he is currently working with Unity and HTML5. He's also a game-programming instructor, speaker, and game-jam organizer.
Read more about Jorge Palacios

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Following a path


There are times when we need scripted routes, and it's just inconceivable to do this entirely by code. Imagine you're working on a stealth game. Would you code a route for every single guard? This technique will help you build a flexible path system for those situations:

Getting ready

We need to define a custom data type called PathSegment:

using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;

public class PathSegment
{
    public Vector3 a;
    public Vector3 b;

    public PathSegment () : this (Vector3.zero, Vector3.zero){}
    public PathSegment (Vector3 a, Vector3 b)
    {
        this.a = a;
        this.b = b;
    }
}

How to do it...

This is a long recipe that could be seen as a big two-step process. First, we build the Path class, which abstracts points in the path from their specific spatial representations, and then we build the PathFollower behavior, which makes use of that abstraction in order to get actual spatial points to follow:

  1. Create the Path class, which consists of nodes and segments but only the nodes are public and assigned manually:

    using UnityEngine;
    using System.Collections;
    using System.Collections.Generic;
    
    public class Path : MonoBehaviour
    {
        public List<GameObject> nodes;
        List<PathSegment> segments;
    }
  2. Define the Start function to set the segments when the scene starts:

    void Start()
    {
        segments = GetSegments();
    }
  3. Define the GetSegments function to build the segments from the nodes:

    public List<PathSegment> GetSegments ()
    {
        List<PathSegment> segments = new List<PathSegment>();
        int i;
        for (i = 0; i < nodes.Count - 1; i++)
        {
            Vector3 src = nodes[i].transform.position;
            Vector3 dst = nodes[i+1].transform.position;
            PathSegment segment = new PathSegment(src, dst);
            segments.Add(segment);
        }
        return segments;
    }
  4. Define the first function for abstraction, called GetParam:

    public float GetParam(Vector3 position, float lastParam)
    {
        // body
    }
  5. We need to find out which segment the agent is closest to:

    float param = 0f;
    PathSegment currentSegment = null;
    float tempParam = 0f;
    foreach (PathSegment ps in segments)
    {
        tempParam += Vector3.Distance(ps.a, ps.b);
        if (lastParam <= tempParam)
        {
            currentSegment = ps;
            break;
        }
    }
    if (currentSegment == null)
        return 0f;
  6. Given the current position, we need to work out the direction to go to:

    Vector3 currPos = position - currentSegment.a;
    Vector3 segmentDirection = currentSegment.b - currentSegment.a;
    segmentDirection.Normalize();
  7. Find the point in the segment using vector projection:

    Vector3 pointInSegment = Vector3.Project(currPos, segmentDirection);
  8. Finally, GetParam returns the next position to go to along the path:

    param = tempParam - Vector3.Distance(currentSegment.a, currentSegment.b);
    param += pointInSegment.magnitude;
    return param;
  9. Define the GetPosition function:

    public Vector3 GetPosition(float param) 
    {
        // body
    }
  10. Given the current location along the path, we find the corresponding segment:

    Vector3 position = Vector3.zero;
    PathSegment currentSegment = null;
    float tempParam = 0f;
    foreach (PathSegment ps in segments)
    {
        tempParam += Vector3.Distance(ps.a, ps.b);
        if (param <= tempParam)
        {
            currentSegment = ps;
            break;
        }
    }
    if (currentSegment == null)
        return Vector3.zero;
  11. Finally, GetPosition converts the parameter as a spatial point and returns it:

    Vector3 segmentDirection = currentSegment.b - currentSegment.a;
    segmentDirection.Normalize();
    tempParam -= Vector3.Distance(currentSegment.a, currentSegment.b);
    tempParam = param - tempParam;
    position = currentSegment.a + segmentDirection * tempParam;
    return position;
  12. Create the PathFollower behavior, which derives from Seek (remember to set the order of execution):

    using UnityEngine;
    using System.Collections;
    
    public class PathFollower : Seek
    {
        public Path path;
        public float pathOffset = 0.0f;
        float currentParam;
    }
  13. Implement the Awake function to set the target:

    public override void Awake()
    {
        base.Awake();
        target = new GameObject();
        currentParam = 0f;
    }
  14. The final step is to define the GetSteering function, which relies on the abstraction created by the Path class to set the target position and apply Seek:

    public override Steering GetSteering()
    {
        currentParam = path.GetParam(transform.position, currentParam);
        float targetParam = currentParam + pathOffset;
        target.transform.position = path.GetPosition(targetParam);
        return base.GetSteering();
    }

How it works...

We use the Path class in order to have a movement guideline. It is the cornerstone, because it relies on GetParam to map an offset point to follow in its internal guideline, and it also uses GetPosition to convert that referential point to a position in the three-dimensional space along the segments.

The path-following algorithm just makes use of the path's functions in order to get a new position, update the target, and apply the Seek behavior.

There's more...

It's important to take into account the order in which the nodes are linked in the Inspector for the path to work as expected. A practical way to achieve this is to manually name the nodes with a reference number.

An example of a path set up in the Inspector window

Also, we could define the OnDrawGizmos function in order to have a better visual reference of the path:

void OnDrawGizmos ()
{
    Vector3 direction;
    Color tmp = Gizmos.color;
    Gizmos.color = Color.magenta;//example color
    int i;
    for (i = 0; i < nodes.Count - 1; i++)
    {
        Vector3 src = nodes[i].transform.position;
        Vector3 dst = nodes[i+1].transform.position;
        direction = dst - src;
        Gizmos.DrawRay(src, direction);
    }
    Gizmos.color = tmp;
}
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Published in: Mar 2016Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781783553570
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Author (1)

author image
Jorge Palacios

Jorge Palacios is a software and game developer with a BS in computer science and eight years of professional experience. He's been developing games for the last five years in different roles, from tool developer to lead programmer. Mainly focused on artificial intelligence and gameplay programming, he is currently working with Unity and HTML5. He's also a game-programming instructor, speaker, and game-jam organizer.
Read more about Jorge Palacios