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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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Facing objects


Real-world aiming, just like in combat simulators, works a little differently from the widely-used automatic aiming in almost every game. Imagine that you need to implement an agent controlling a tank turret or a humanized sniper; that's when this recipe comes in handy.

Getting ready

We need to make some modifications to our AgentBehaviour class:

  1. Add new member values to limit some of the existing ones:

    public float maxSpeed;
    public float maxAccel;
    public float maxRotation;
    public float maxAngularAccel;
  2. Add a function called MapToRange. This function helps in finding the actual direction of rotation after two orientation values are subtracted:

    public float MapToRange (float rotation) {
        rotation %= 360.0f;
        if (Mathf.Abs(rotation) > 180.0f) {
            if (rotation < 0.0f)
                rotation += 360.0f;
            else
                rotation -= 360.0f;
        }
        return rotation;
    }
  3. Also, we need to create a basic behavior called Align that is the stepping stone for the facing algorithm. It uses the same principle as Arrive, but only in terms of rotation:

    using UnityEngine;
    using System.Collections;
    
    public class Align : AgentBehaviour
    {
        public float targetRadius;
        public float slowRadius;
        public float timeToTarget = 0.1f;
    
        public override Steering GetSteering()
        {
            Steering steering = new Steering();
            float targetOrientation = target.GetComponent<Agent>().orientation;
            float rotation = targetOrientation - agent.orientation;
            rotation = MapToRange(rotation);
            float rotationSize = Mathf.Abs(rotation);
            if (rotationSize < targetRadius)
                return steering;
            float targetRotation;
            if (rotationSize > slowRadius)
                targetRotation = agent.maxRotation;
            else
                targetRotation = agent.maxRotation * rotationSize / slowRadius;
            targetRotation *= rotation / rotationSize;
            steering.angular = targetRotation - agent.rotation;
            steering.angular /= timeToTarget;
            float angularAccel = Mathf.Abs(steering.angular);
            if (angularAccel > agent.maxAngularAccel)
            {
                steering.angular /= angularAccel;
                steering.angular *= agent.maxAngularAccel;
            }
            return steering;
        }
    }

How to do it...

We now proceed to implement our facing algorithm that derives from Align:

  1. Create the Face class along with a private auxiliary target member variable:

    using UnityEngine;
    using System.Collections;
    
    public class Face : Align
    {
        protected GameObject targetAux;
    }
  2. Override the Awake function to set up everything and swap references:

    public override void Awake()
    {
        base.Awake();
        targetAux = target;
        target = new GameObject();
        target.AddComponent<Agent>();
    }
  3. Also, implement the OnDestroy function to handle references and avoid memory issues:

    void OnDestroy ()
    {
        Destroy(target);
    }
  4. Finally, define the GetSteering function:

    public override Steering GetSteering()
    {
        Vector3 direction = targetAux.transform.position - transform.position;
        if (direction.magnitude > 0.0f)
        {
            float targetOrientation = Mathf.Atan2(direction.x, direction.z);
            targetOrientation *= Mathf.Rad2Deg;
            target.GetComponent<Agent>().orientation = targetOrientation;
        }
        return base.GetSteering();
    }

How it works...

The algorithm computes the internal target orientation according to the vector between the agent and the real target. Then, it just delegates the work to its parent class.

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Unity 5.x Game AI Programming Cookbook
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