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  • Book Overview & Buying Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity
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Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity

Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity

By : Harrison Ferrone
4.4 (47)
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Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity

Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity

4.4 (47)
By: Harrison Ferrone

Overview of this book

It's the ability to write custom C# scripts for behaviors and game mechanics that really takes Unity the extra mile. That's where this book can help you as a new programmer! Harrison Ferrone, in this seventh edition of the bestselling series will take you through the building blocks of programming and the C# language from scratch while building a fun and playable game prototype in Unity. This book will teach you the fundamentals of OOPs, basic concepts of C#, and Unity engine with lots of code samples, exercises and tips to go beyond the book with your work. You will write C# scripts for simple game mechanics, perform procedural programming, and add complexity to your games by introducing intelligent enemies and damage-dealing projectiles. You will explore the fundamentals of Unity game development, including game design, lighting basics, player movement, camera controls, collisions, and more with every passing chapter. Note: The screenshots in the book display the Unity editor in full-screen mode for a comprehensive view. Users can easily reference color versions of images by downloading them from the GitHub repository or the graphics bundle linked in the book.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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15
Pop Quiz Answers
16
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Scripting camera behavior

The easiest way to get one GameObject to follow another is to make one of them a child of the other. When an object is a child of another, the child object’s position and rotation are relative to the parent. This means that any child object will move and rotate with the parent object.

However, this approach means that any kind of movement or rotation that happens to the player capsule also affects the camera (like a waterfall affects the water downstream), which is something we don’t necessarily want. We always want the camera to be positioned a set distance behind our player and always rotate to look at it, no matter what. Luckily, we can easily set the position and rotation of the camera relative to the capsule with methods from the Transform class. It’s your task to script out the camera logic in the next challenge.

Since we want the camera behavior to be entirely separate from how the player moves, we’ll be controlling...

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