3.5 KiB
Parameters
Creating and Sampling Parameters
Parameters are often defined as fields of a Randomizer class, but they can also be instanced just like any other C# class:
// Create a color Parameter
var colorParameter = new HsvaColorParameter();
// Generate one color sample
var color = colorParameter.Sample();
Note that Parameters, like Samplers, generate new random values for each call to the Sample() method:
var color1 = colorParameter.Sample();
var color2 = colorParameter.Sample();
Assert.AreNotEqual(color1, color2);
Defining Custom Parameters
All Parameters derive from the Parameter
abstract class. Additionally, the Parameters included in the Perception package types derive from two specialized Parameter base classes:
CategoricalParameter
NumericParameter
Using Parameters outside of Randomizers (ie: in MonoBehaviours and ScriptableObjects)
After adding a public Parameter field to a MonoBehaviour or ScriptableObject, you may have noticed that the Parameter's UI does not look the same as it does when added to a Randomizer. This is because the Inspector UI for most Perception randomization components is authored using Unity's relatively new UI Elements framework, though by default, Unity uses the old IMGUI framework to render default inspector editors.
Say you have the following CustomMonoBehaviour that has a public GameObjectParameter field:
using UnityEngine;
using UnityEngine.Perception.Randomization.Parameters;
public class CustomMonoBehaviour : MonoBehaviour
{
public GameObjectParameter prefabs;
}
To force Unity to use UI Elements to render your CustomMonoBehaviour's inspector window, create a custom editor for your MonoBehaviour by deriving the ParameterUIElementsEditor class like so:
using UnityEditor;
using UnityEngine.Perception.Editor;
[CustomEditor(typeof(CustomMonoBehaviour))]
public class CustomMonoBehaviourEditor : ParameterUIElementsEditor { }
Note: Any editor scripts must be placed inside an "Editor" folder within your project. "Editor" is a special folder name in Unity that prevents editor code from compiling into a player during the build process. For example, the file path for the CustomMonoBehaviourEditor script above could be ".../Assets/Scripts/Editor/CustomMonoBehaviourEditor".
Categorical Parameters
Categorical Parameters choose a value from a list of options that have no intrinsic ordering. For example, a material Parameter randomly chooses from a list of material options, but the list of material options itself can be rearranged into any particular order without affecting the distribution of materials selected.
If your custom Parameter is categorical in nature, take a look at the StringParameter class included in the perception package as a reference for how to derive the CategoricalParameter
class.
using UnityEngine.Perception.Randomization.Parameters.Attributes;
namespace UnityEngine.Perception.Randomization.Parameters
{
[AddComponentMenu("")]
[ParameterMetaData("String")]
public class StringParameter : CategoricalParameter<string> {}
}
Note: the AddComponentMenu attribute with an empty string prevents Parameters from appearing in the Add Component GameObject menu. Randomization Parameters should only be created with by a ParameterConfiguration
Numeric Parameters
Numeric Parameters use samplers to generate randomized structs. Take a look at the ColorHsvaParameter class included in the Perception package for an example on how to implement a numeric Parameter.