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How can I offset a raycast along the transform's local x/z axis?
What I am trying to achieve:
If I need to shoot say 3 raycasts (C#): 1 from transform.position (blue line), 1 to the left of this by an offset of lets say 2 units (left yellow line), and 1 to the right by the same offset (right yellow line), how can I do this? I imagine it could be something like:
transform.position + publicVariable (and)
transform.position - publicVariable
Here is my script:
using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;
public class EnemyAI3 : MonoBehaviour {
public Transform target;
public int raycastLength = 1;
public float leftRaycast = 2f;
public float rightRaycast = -2f;
public bool raycastHitting = false;
public bool raycastHittingL = false;
public float turnSpeed = 5;
private Transform myTransform;
void Awake() {
myTransform = transform;
}
// Use this for initialization
void Start () {
GameObject go = GameObject.FindGameObjectWithTag("Player");
target = go.transform;
leftRaycast.x -= 2;
rightRaycast.x += 2;
}
// Update is called once per frame
void FixedUpdate () {
//Start Raycast forward
if(Physics.Raycast(myTransform.position, myTransform.forward, raycastLength)){
Debug.DrawLine(myTransform.position, myTransform.forward, Color.blue);
myTransform.Rotate(Vector3.up, -90 * turnSpeed * Time.smoothDeltaTime);
raycastHitting = true;
}
if(!Physics.Raycast(myTransform.position, myTransform.forward, raycastLength)){
raycastHitting = false;
}
//End Raycast
//Start Raycast Left
if(Physics.Raycast(myTransform.position, myTransform.right * leftRaycast, raycastLength)){
Debug.DrawLine(myTransform.position, myTransform.right * leftRaycast, Color.yellow);
myTransform.Rotate(Vector3.up, 90 * turnSpeed * Time.smoothDeltaTime);
raycastHittingL = true;
}
if(!Physics.Raycast(myTransform.position, myTransform.right * leftRaycast, raycastLength)){
raycastHittingL = false;
}
//End Raycast
}
}
What is the best way to do this?
Answer by Berenger · Mar 07, 2012 at 07:03 AM
- The class Transform don't have an x property, but a position, which is a Vector3 and have an x property.
- You them any. If I understand correctly, you want to cast three parallele rays from position with an offset on x. In that case, declare two public float offset1, offset2, then your three rays' origines will be
transform.position + transform.right * offset1; // for instance, offset1 = -2
transform.position + transform.right;
transform.position + transform.right * offset2; // for instance, offset2 = 2
- If you need the case where the ray don't hit anything, do not cast it again with !, use else instead.
- By using the same bool for all the rays (raycastHitting), it's will always take the last value, hiding the other. Just in case you need that bool, which you don't in the ewample above.
Thanks for your help. I threw in a diagram up top to better show what I'm trying to do. The blue line is the first raycast (mytransform.position) in the script and the left yellow line is the left raycast (myTransform.position, myTransform.right * leftRaycast). I've changed the second raycast to as you suggested but it changes the angle of the raycast it doesn't actually offset it. Or have I done it wrong?
$$anonymous$$eep in $$anonymous$$d that a ray is composed of two things, an origin and a direction. Saying "the first raycast (mytransform.position)" makes no sens if you don't add the direction (I suppose you imply it's forward there).
So you want to cast a ray forward, to the right and to the left, with an offset on the origine : the the three lines of codes in my answer. the direction don't need to be multiplied, unless you want to invert it. In your case, and respectively with the origines I gave you, directions are transform.left, transform.forward and transform.right.
Thanks for trying to help Berenger, but I couldn't get your solution to work. I ended up using a Vector3 variable to deter$$anonymous$$e the direction which allowed me to set a ".x" offset for the other raycasts. All is gd now :D
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