This document aims to provide a quickstart guide to using unifir. By that, I mean on how an end user could use unifir to produce and create Unity scenes. For more information on how the underlying framework functions, check out unifir 102 - A developer’s guide. This vignette is going to assume you want to use unifir directly to control your scenes and manage a Unity project.
But before we get into that, we should answer a question: why use unifir at all?
Unity is a video game engine which can be used to produce any number of immersive experiences, ranging from fantastical video game worlds to more grounded representations of real-world places. Typically, a Unity project is created and edited entirely in the Unity GUI, with the landscape and everything in it placed very intentionally by a designer.
That approach works really well when attempting to build artistic experiences, but limits the power of this tool as a way to represent very specific scenarios. If you have a landscape you want to represent in a game engine – be it a real world location or the outputs from a simulation program – actually creating that representation is a painstaking manual process. And that’s a shame, because the sorts of immersive virtual environments that you can make in Unity have the potential to be really powerful communication tools.
It’s into that world that we’re launching unifir. This package aims to connect R – one of the best tools in existence for wrangling data, be it about the real world or a simulated output – with Unity, so that creating data-driven representations can be less painful (and as a nice side effect, more reproducible and less error-prone as well). Hopefully, by providing a well-structured set of tools for interacting with the Unity scripting API, we can make it easier to produce these sorts of data-driven virtual environments moving forward.
With the why answered, it’s time to move on to the how. Before we get into the R specifics, it’s probably worthwhile to define a few terms.
We’ll be talking a lot about Unity projects, which are single directories inside which all of the code and data associated with a single Unity environment are stored. unifir operates on a single project at a time; there’s not a way to have a single pipeline work across two different projects. Similarly, a given Unity GUI window only operates on a single project at a time. The next level of organization within Unity is a scene, which is a collection of objects and code that are present in the user’s environment at the same time. unifir can operate on multiple scenes within a single project with no problem.
With that sorted, we can move on to unifir itself. The first part of
working with Unity from R is installing Unity. Once Unity is
installed on your machine, you should be able to locate it using the
function find_unity()
:
This function finds the path to the Unity executable on your system
that unifir will use to execute all its commands. Should you want to use
a different Unity version, you can set the environment variable
unifir_unity_path
(or the option of the same name) to the
path to the version you want to use.
With your Unity location set, you should be ready to start working
with unifir. The key object of the unifir package is the “script”
object, which unifir uses to store all of the commands you’re going to
execute in Unity before actually running them. We can use the
make_script()
function to make a script, using the
project
argument to specify where on our machine we want
the Unity project to exist. If the project directory doesn’t exist, it
will be created automatically unless you set
initialize_project = FALSE
.
Our object script
is now an R6 object of the class
unifir_script
. By itself, this object isn’t super exciting;
however, it provides the basic shell we’re going to use to keep track of
all the things we want to do to our project.
In order to specify those things, we can go ahead and add “props” to
our “script” object. unifir comes with a number of prop-building
functions pre-specified, though the hope is that with time other
packages can add their own props to this framework, enabling a wider
variety of functionality than is currently implemented. For instance,
the terrainr package
provides a function, make_unity
(currently only in the
development build) which converts any files that can be read by the
raster
package into terrain surfaces you can actually walk
across. That function wraps a number of unifir props to actually
interact with the Unity engine, but also performs some spatial data
wrangling that make sense to live in a more specialized package.
As a result, the props that are actually implemented in unifir tend
to be a little more elemental – creating and saving scenes, adding
lights and player controllers, the sorts of things that are applicable
to most Unity projects. If we wanted to add a character controller to
our scene, for instance, we can use the
add_default_player()
function to modify our
script
:
On the surface, our script
object doesn’t change when we
do this. However, if we look at script$props
instead, we’d
see that we now have three unifir_prop
objects in our
script. This list is how unifir keeps track of what exactly it needs to
do to make your script into a scene; it will run through your props in
the order you added them to the script.
add_default_player()
is just one function that adds props
to our script; other functions in unifir will add props to add lights,
3D models, terrain, and more to your script. You can see the prop
functions listed under “See Also” in any prop’s help page (so for
instance, after running ?add_default_player
).
One thing to highlight is that we need to explicitly save our scenes
at the end of any script. If you don’t save your scene, then after your
script executes you’ll find that Unity hasn’t made any changes to your
project! Always be sure to add a save_scene()
call to the
end of your script:
This will save our scene with all of its changes, but Unity won’t
automatically default to loading this scene when we open our
project. If we want our scene to load as soon as we open the project, we
can add another prop to our script via the function
set_active_scene()
:
If you forget to do this, you can open scenes from inside Unity (File -> Open Scene); unifir always saves scenes to the “Scenes” folder.
Now that we’ve added props to our script, it’s time to actually make
our scene a reality. You can play out your script using the function
action()
, which will create a Unity project, turn your
props into C# code, and then execute that code inside the project to
produce your scenes!
And just like that, you’ve created a Unity project that you can open
and look around in! Note that your scene won’t be open by default
(unless you’ve used the set_active_scene()
function) – to
actually see all the changes you’ve made, make sure to load the
scene located in the Scenes
folder inside your project.
So now that we know the basics of how a unifir script is built, we should walk through how to actually build one to make a scene! We’ll walk through adding terrain, trees, and a character to a scene and then see what it looks like when rendered.
First things first, we’ll need a script! Just like before, we’ll make
our script using the make_script()
function:
Up next, we need data on the terrain we want to add! We can generate a random terrain surface using the terra package, so we’ll load that now:
And we’ll need to convert that terrain into a format Unity can read, so we’ll load in the terrainr package as well:
Importing terrain into Unity is a little bit wonky. First off, Unity
can’t process standard raster data, but rather needs a specialized
format that most libraries don’t work with (namely, raw bytestreams with
planar interlacing); for that reason, we’re going to need to use
terrainr’s transform_elevation()
function to transform our
elevation raster into a proper format.
Additionally, Unity doesn’t have a great way for wrangling objects of different unit systems – it assumes that a distance of “1” in a 3D model is also a distance of “1” in the terrain, no matter what units that “1” is in. It’s common, but not at all universal, for a distance of “1” to represent a distance of 1 meter, but depending where you’re getting assets from you might need to rescale your rasters and models to make everything line up appropriately.
Lastly, Unity expects terrain tiles to be (2^x) + 1 unit squares,
where x is some number between 1 and 12. For that reason, we’ll go ahead
and generate a terrain tile that’s 4,097 units across in both
directions, with heights centered on 10 units elevation. We’ll then go
ahead and write that out to a temporary file at
raster_file
, then use terrainr to convert that raster into
a format Unity can import:
terrain_size <- 4097
r <- terra::rast(
matrix(rnorm(terrain_size^2, 0, 0.2), terrain_size),
extent = terra::ext(0, terrain_size, 0, terrain_size)
)
raster_file <- tempfile(fileext = ".tiff")
terra::writeRaster(r, raster_file)
# I'm quieting the warnings down here, because they can be safely ignored:
raster_file <- suppressWarnings(
terrainr::transform_elevation(raster_file,
side_length = terrain_size,
output_prefix = tempfile())
)
We can then go ahead and add that terrain object to our scene using
the function create_terrain()
. This function is a bit
unwieldy (and will soon have some user-friendly wrappers in the terrainr
package), so I’ll explain the function arguments inline:
tree_script <- create_terrain(
script = tree_script, # Our unifir_script
heightmap_path = raster_file, # The file path to our elevation raster
# Where should the "top-left" corner of the terrain sit?
# Note that Unity uses a left-handed Y-up coordinate system
# where Y is the vertical axis and X and Z define the "horizontal" plane.
# We want our terrain to center on the origin of the scene (that is, 0,0,0)
# so we'll set both to -2,050:
x_pos = -2050,
z_pos = -2050,
width = terrain_size, # The total width of the terrain tile (X axis)
length = terrain_size, # The total length of the terrain tile (Z axis)
height = as.numeric(terra::global(r, max)), # Max height of the terrain (Y axis)
# How many pixels are there in the raster along the total width/length?
heightmap_resolution = terrain_size
)
Our terrain is now set to be added to our scene when we run our script! Up next, we can go ahead and add trees on top of the scene. We’ll randomly generate 100 X and Z coordinates (since Y is “up” in Unity), centered around the 0,0 point at the middle of our map:
Planting trees at these positions is a lot easier than putting our
terrain in place. unifir provides a function,
add_default_tree()
, which will download and add a few
simple tree models to any scene you want. There’s 12 tree models
available at the time of writing, all released under the public domain;
we’ll use the first one named tree_1
.
This function is vectorized, so can create multiple trees at once. We’ll take advantage of that by providing our X and Z coordinates to create 100 separate trees at once – note that if we wanted, we could also pass a vector of tree names to use multiple models at the same time.
tree_script <- add_default_tree(
tree_script,
"tree_1",
x_position = pos$x,
z_position = pos$z,
y_position = 0 # The average height of the terrain
)
We’ve now got instructions to create our terrain and our tree
objects! We also want to add a player controller to the scene, using the
add_default_player()
function created earlier:
And we should also add a light to the scene, using the
add_light()
function:
With all of our props in place, we now need to make sure that we save our changes! We should also set up our project so that it loads our scene as soon as its opened:
tree_script <- tree_script |>
save_scene(scene_name = "trees") |>
set_active_scene(scene_name = "trees")
And with that, we’re good to go! The only thing left to do is to run
our script, using the action()
function:
Upon opening Unity, you should see your terrain and trees fully realized in the scene:
If you hit the “play” button at the top of the window, you’ll drop into the player character and can walk around and explore your environment.
And there’s all you need to know to start using unifir! If you’re looking to get even more in the weeds about how unifir works, make sure to check out unifir 102 - A developer’s guide.