Book Image

Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity 2021 - Sixth Edition

By : Harrison Ferrone
Book Image

Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity 2021 - Sixth Edition

By: Harrison Ferrone

Overview of this book

The Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity series has established itself as a popular choice for getting up to speed with C#, a powerful and versatile programming language with a wide array of applications in various domains. This bestselling franchise presents a clear path for learning C# programming from the ground up through the world of Unity game development. This sixth edition has been updated to introduce modern C# features with Unity 2021. A new chapter has also been added that covers reading and writing binary data from files, which will help you become proficient in handling errors and asynchronous operations. The book acquaints you with the core concepts of programming in C#, including variables, classes, and object-oriented programming. You will explore the fundamentals of Unity game development, including game design, lighting basics, player movement, camera controls, and collisions. You will write C# scripts for simple game mechanics, perform procedural programming, and add complexity to your games by introducing smart enemies and damage-causing projectiles. By the end of the book, you will have developed the skills to become proficient in C# programming and built a playable game prototype with the Unity game engine.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
15
Pop Quiz Answers
16
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Lighting basics

Lighting in Unity is a broad topic, but it can be boiled down into two categories: real-time and precomputed. Both types of lights take into account properties such as the color and intensity of the light, as well as the direction it is facing in the scene, which can all be configured in the Inspector pane. The difference is how the Unity engine computes how the lights act.

Real-time lighting is computed every frame, meaning that any object that passes in its path will cast realistic shadows and generally behave like a real-world light source. However, this can significantly slow down your game and cost an exponential amount of computing power, depending on the number of lights in your Scene. Precomputed lighting, on the other hand, stores the Scene's lighting in a texture called a lightmap, which is then applied, or baked, into the scene. While this saves computing power, baked lighting is static. This means that it doesn't react realistically or change...