relativePath | Path to the game object this curve applies to. The relativePath
is formatted similar to a pathname, e.g. "root/spine/leftArm". If relativePath
is empty it refers to the game object the animation clip is attached to. |
type | The class type of the component that is animated. |
propertyName | The name or path to the property being animated. |
curve | The animation curve. |
Assigns the curve to animate a specific property.
If curve
is null the curve will be removed. If a curve already exists
for that property, it will be replaced.
Note: SetCurve
will only work at runtime for legacy animation clips. For non-legacy AnimationClips
it is an editor-only function.
The following script example shows how a GameObject
position can be animated using an
animation clip. An animated curve is set onto the AnimationClip using SetCurve()
.
This example moves the x offset from 1.0 down to 0.0.
The SetCurve API can be used to animate a large variety of
parameters. Some typical components such as Transform and Material have
easy to access variables. For example the Transform has variables such as
Transform.localPosition. The x, y, and z values of the localPosition
can be
animated using the AnimationClip API. View the Transform documentation to
see the variables and how they can be animated.
The Material class also links
to variables that can be animated. These come from the shader that is used for
rendering. Using the "Edit Shader..." option from the material drop down shows
all the parameters that can be animated. The animatable parameters all start
with underscore, so, for example color (_Color
) and scale (_BumpScale
)
can be animated.
To index into multiple materials on the same renderer you can prefix the attribute
like this:
"[1]._MainTex.offset.y"
.
The example script below shows how a GameObject can be animated in two ways at the
same time. In this example, the position of the GameObject is animated, and the
Material color is also changed over time.
// This script example shows how SetCurve() can be used using UnityEngine; using System.Collections;
public class ExampleClass : MonoBehaviour { // Animate the position and color of the GameObject public void Start() { Animation anim = GetComponent<Animation>(); AnimationCurve curve;
// create a new AnimationClip AnimationClip clip = new AnimationClip(); clip.legacy = true;
// create a curve to move the GameObject and assign to the clip Keyframe[] keys; keys = new Keyframe[3]; keys[0] = new Keyframe(0.0f, 0.0f); keys[1] = new Keyframe(1.0f, 1.5f); keys[2] = new Keyframe(2.0f, 0.0f); curve = new AnimationCurve(keys); clip.SetCurve("", typeof(Transform), "localPosition.x", curve);
// update the clip to a change the red color curve = AnimationCurve.Linear(0.0f, 1.0f, 2.0f, 0.0f); clip.SetCurve("", typeof(Material), "_Color.r", curve);
// now animate the GameObject anim.AddClip(clip, clip.name); anim.Play(clip.name); } }
Property names can be located by setting Asset Serialization to
Force Text mode in the Editor settings. Use Edit->Project Settings->Editor
to enable this mode. The text files that are then written
by the editor will include the names of the properties. For example, the yaml
file written for a Scene object will include the Camera settings. Looking at this
yaml file will show:m_BackGroundColor: {r: .192156866, g: .301960796, b: .474509805, a: .0196078438}
m_NormalizedViewPortRect:
serializedVersion: 2
x: 0
y: 0
width: 1
height: 1
near clip plane: .300000012
far clip plane: 1000
field of view: 60
orthographic: 0
orthographic size: 5
m_Depth: -1
This shows that the name for the FOV parameter is "field of view". If you wanted to
create an animation clip to animate the camera field of view, you would pass "field of view"
as the propertyName.
Another example is the access of Light
settings. The scene.unity
file
(assuming a Scene called scene
) will have a string for the light color.
Script can access the light color by accessing m_Color
. The Scene will need
to have a light for this example to work.
See Also: ClearCurves function, and the AnimationCurve class.
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