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How to make a Cube Roll in JS in direction of camera?
Hello,
i'm very new to javascript and im trying to make a cube roll. I tried some stuff with animations but really like to do it in JS. The cube is rolling but its really going out of control. Eventually i want to make it roll in the direction my camera is aiming.
I've been checking out some other qeustions but didn't rlly help me out.
private var rollSpeed : float = 8;
function Update () { if (Input.GetMouseButton(2)) Screen.lockCursor = true;
if (Input.GetKey("right"))
{
rigidbody.AddTorque(Vector3.back * rollSpeed);
}
if (Input.GetKey("left"))
{
rigidbody.AddTorque(Vector3.forward * rollSpeed);
}
if (Input.GetKey("up"))
{
rigidbody.AddTorque(Vector3.right * rollSpeed);
}
if (Input.GetKey("down"))
{
rigidbody.AddTorque(Vector3.left * rollSpeed);
}
}
Hope someone can tell me what to add or change.
Answer by aldonaletto · Apr 15, 2012 at 08:15 PM
I answered a question some time ago that did about the same thing: a cube that flipped in the direction defined by the arrow keys. The idea was to emulate the behaviour of the game Edge.
If you just want to reproduce the flipping walk style, the script below can do the job. Just create a cube and attach this script to it. If you want the flop sound, add an AudioSource and assign an appropriate sound to it (footstep4 from the FPS Tutorial is fine).
When some movement key is pressed, the routine Flop defines around which point and axis the block will rotate, then does a 90 degrees rotation during the time defined by speed. To avoid accumulated errors, the routine AlignBlock is called prior moving. This routine forces orientation alignment to the axes by rounding the eulerAngles to multiples of 90 degrees. It also forces the position alignment to multiples of the block size (defined by size) thus the block will always walk in a grid with size spacing.
If the block has no rigidbody, it will be a really nice guy, flopping precisely over the grid positions - but will not be constrained by collisions nor be affected by gravity. If you add a rigidbody, it will collide and fall, but the flopping action will become somewhat weird (it sometimes stops for a while before ending the 90 degrees rotation). Anyway, the AlignBlock routine will always bring it back to the right position before moving.
NOTE: if a rigidbody is added, AlignBlock ignores Y to not interfere with gravity.
var speed: float = 2.5; // flops per second var size: float = 1; // block size
var flopping = false;
function Update(){
var move = Vector2(Input.GetAxis("Horizontal"), Input.GetAxis("Vertical"));
if (move.magnitude > 0.2) Flop(move);
}
function Flop(movDir: Vector2){
var pivot: Vector3;
var dir: Vector3;
if (flopping) return; // ignore other commands while flopping
flopping = true; // signals it's flopping
if (movDir.y > 0){ // move forward?
dir = Vector3.forward; // will flop forward
pivot = Vector3(0,-1,1); // defines point around which rotate
}
else
if (movDir.y < 0){
dir = -Vector3.forward;
pivot = Vector3(0,-1,-1);
}
else
if (movDir.x < 0){
dir = -Vector3.right;
pivot = Vector3(-1,-1,0);
}
else
if (movDir.x > 0){
dir = Vector3.right;
pivot = Vector3(1,-1,0);
}
AlignBlock(); // aligns block to grid before flopping
// calculates the point around which the block will flop
pivot = transform.position + (pivot * size / 2);
var org = transform.position - pivot;
var dest = (transform.position + dir * size) - pivot;
var rot0 = transform.rotation;
var rot1 = Quaternion.FromToRotation(org, dest) * rot0;
var a: float = 0;
while (a < 1){
var dt = Time.deltaTime * speed;
a += dt;
transform.position = Vector3.Slerp(org, dest, a) + pivot;
transform.rotation = Quaternion.Lerp(rot0, rot1, a);
yield;
}
if (audio) audio.Play(); // makes the flop sound
flopping = false;
}
private function AlignBlock(){
var angles = transform.eulerAngles;
// forces euler angles to be multiple of 90
angles.x = 90 * Mathf.RoundToInt(angles.x / 90);
angles.y = 90 * Mathf.RoundToInt(angles.y / 90);
angles.z = 90 * Mathf.RoundToInt(angles.z / 90);
transform.eulerAngles = angles;
var pos = transform.position;
// forces x and z to be in a grid
pos.x = size * Mathf.RoundToInt(pos.x / size);
pos.z = size * Mathf.RoundToInt(pos.z / size);
if (!rigidbody) pos.y = size * Mathf.RoundToInt(pos.y / size);
transform.position = pos;
}
Thanks for the scrip you rlly helped me out. but i have one more question im useing the mouse orbit script and like to change the forward direction to the direction the camera is ai$$anonymous$$g.
i hope its possible
I think you could get the direction camera->cube and fake a move vector that would make the cube move in the camera forward direction. But there's a problem: the cube will never stop moving, because there will always exist a forward direction. To solve this, define a button or key - the "walk" button.
I assumed key W is the walk button, and modified Update to work this way - just replace the original Update with this one:
function Update(){ if (Input.Get$$anonymous$$ey("w")){ // if W is pressed... // get the dir camera->cube: var dir = transform.position - Camera.main.transform.position; // ignore the less significant horizontal direction: if ($$anonymous$$athf.Abs(dir.z) >= $$anonymous$$athf.Abs(dir.x)){ dir.x = 0; } else { dir.z = 0; } Flop(Vector2(dir.x, dir.z)); } } ...
I'v tried to make it move it backwards if this is poossible by changing the dir.x and dir.z but i couldn't work it out.
I alsoe want to make it move left and right but i might figure that out if i know how to move backwards
It should go in the direction the camera is looking at - to move backwards, you should rotate the camera with the mouse to point the backward direction (the same applies to left and right).
If you want to control the cube with the keyboard, just use the original code of this answer - its Update function reads "Horizontal" and "Vertical" axes to control cube movement.
I've posted an answer to an even older question here. I've just took a look at my code and it's very simple to make it work with different sizes as long as the cube is aligned with the world because the easiest way to deter$$anonymous$$e it's size is using renderer.bounds.size ;)
Btw: $$anonymous$$e does even work with a quader with the size 1 x 2 x 3 ;)
Here's the modified and even simplified version of my script:
private var rotator : Transform;
var speed = 1.0;
var rotating = false;
function RotateCube(refPoint : Vector3, rotationAxis : Vector3)
{
var size = renderer.bounds.extents;
refPoint = Vector3.Scale(refPoint - Vector3.up,size);
rotator.localRotation = Quaternion.identity;
rotator.position = transform.position + refPoint;
transform.parent = rotator;
var angle : float = 0;
while(angle < 90.0)
{
angle += Time.deltaTime*90.0*speed;
rotator.rotation = Quaternion.AngleAxis($$anonymous$$athf.$$anonymous$$in(angle,90.0),rotationAxis);
yield;
}
audio.PlayOneShot(audio.clip);
transform.parent = null;
rotating = false;
}
function Start()
{
rotator = (new GameObject("Rotator")).transform;
}
function Update ()
{
if (!rotating)
{
if (Input.Get$$anonymous$$ey($$anonymous$$eyCode.D))
{
rotating = true;
RotateCube(Vector3.right,-Vector3.forward);
}
else if (Input.Get$$anonymous$$ey($$anonymous$$eyCode.A))
{
rotating = true;
RotateCube(-Vector3.right,Vector3.forward);
}
else if (Input.Get$$anonymous$$ey($$anonymous$$eyCode.W))
{
rotating = true;
RotateCube(Vector3.forward,Vector3.right);
}
else if (Input.Get$$anonymous$$ey($$anonymous$$eyCode.S))
{
rotating = true;
RotateCube(-Vector3.forward,-Vector3.right);
}
}
}
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