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Angle between two objects' facing direction
Hello Everybody...
I'm currently working on a project which requires me to do something I just can't figure out.
need to know the angle between two objects facing directions. Let me explain; if you look down on two arrows, with the heads down the x-axis, rotated randomly, around the y-axis. Now I need to know the angle between the two arrowheads.*
So if the two arrows face away from each other I need an angle of 180 degrees, and If they face the same direction I need an angle of 0 degrees.
I tried everything from trigonometric functions to simple unity references, and nothing seems to work how I want it, I have a hunch the Vector3.Angle could work, but so far it doesn't.
Answer by Piflik · May 06, 2012 at 06:08 PM
Vector3.Angle gives you the angle between two directions. Just put transform.forward of both objects in there, and it should give you the angle you need.
It has one limitation, though, it doesn't distinguish between CW and CCW. I wrote a function for that:
function angleDir(fwd: Vector3, targetDir: Vector3, up: Vector3) {
var perp: Vector3 = Vector3.Cross(fwd, targetDir);
var dir: float = Vector3.Dot(perp, up);
if (dir > 0.0) {
return 1.0;
} else if (dir < 0.0) {
return -1.0;
} else {
return 0.0;
}
}
It returns 1.0 for CW, -1.0 for CCW and 0.0, if the angle between the two objects is 0.
here it is in C#
float AngleDir (Vector3 fwd, Vector3 targetDir, Vector3 up) {
Vector3 perp = Vector3.Cross(fwd, targetDir);
float dir = Vector3.Dot(perp, up);
if (dir > 0) {
return 1;
} else if (dir < 0) {
return -1;
} else {
return 0;
}
}
Sorry for not marking you answers a correct sooner.
As the question posted was an analogy for just a part of what I was doing I tried a lot of methods out, including yours and co$$anonymous$$g to the conclusion I was thinking about it in a wrong fashion. I ended up using a combination of vector calculations and trigonometry to achieve the effect I was looking for.
Nevertheless for the question I posted this was a fulfilling answer. And it did help me.
Hey @BobBobson108 Thanks for the C# version, ONE question, I read this whole question, and if im reading it right I could potentially check if my local objects y axis is pointing in the same direction as the Space.World y axis such as just vector3.up (Basically detecting if my gameobject is pointing in the same direction as the world or gobal axises) I only need to check if the two y axises (1.Being my GameObjects y axis) (2.Being a Vector3.Up) are pointing in the same direction. Let me know if im wrong thanks :D
Just a little tweak to make the function shorter (C#):
float AngleDir(Vector3 fwd, Vector3 targetDir)
{
Vector3 perp = Vector3.Cross(fwd, targetDir);
float dir = Vector3.Dot(perp, Vector3.up);
return $$anonymous$$athf.Sign(dir);
}
https://docs.unity3d.com/ScriptReference/Vector3.SignedAngle.html
Now it does support Clockwise and Counter Clockwise returns
Answer by Mehrdad995 · Jul 14, 2017 at 02:24 PM
I personally found this more simple and understandable
public static float CalculateAngle180_v3(Vector3 fromDir, Vector3 toDir)
{
float angle = Quaternion.FromToRotation(fromDir, toDir).eulerAngles.y;
if(angle > 180){return angle - 360f;}
return angle;
}
you can also return all angles as a vector3
Couple questions (I know this is old): Will this calculate the angle for a specific axis? You said it all angles can be returned as a Vector3 via eulerAngles. Is the angle signed? @$$anonymous$$ehrdad995