A* Pathfinding Project
4.1.7
The A* Pathfinding Project for Unity 3D
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Tutorial on navmesh cutting
Navmesh cutting is used for fast recast graph updates. Navmesh cutting is used to cut holes into an existing navmesh generated by a recast graph. Recast graphs usually only allow either just changing parameters on existing nodes (e.g make a whole triangle unwalkable) which is not very flexible or recalculate a whole tile which is pretty slow. With navmesh cutting you can remove (cut) parts of the navmesh that is blocked by obstacles such as a new building in an RTS game however you cannot add anything new to the navmesh or change the positions of the nodes.
The NavmeshCut component uses a 2D shape to cut the navmesh with. A rectangle and circle shape is built in, but you can also specify a custom mesh to use. The custom mesh should be a flat 2D shape like in the image below. The script will then find the contour of that mesh and use that shape as the cut. Make sure that all normals are smooth and that the mesh contains no UV information. Otherwise Unity might split a vertex and then the script will not find the correct contour. You should not use a very high polygon mesh since that will create a lot of nodes in the navmesh graph and slow down pathfinding because of that. For very high polygon meshes it might even cause more suboptimal paths to be generated if it causes many thin triangles to be added to the navmesh.
Note that the shape is not 3D so if you rotate the cut you will see that the 2D shape will be rotated and then just projected down on the XZ plane.
To use a navmesh cut in your scene you need to have a TileHandlerHelper script somewhere in your scene. You should only have one though. That script will take care of checking all the NavmeshCut components to see if they need to update the navmesh.
In the scene view the NavmeshCut looks like an extruded 2D shape because a navmesh cut also has a height. It will only cut the part of the navmesh which it touches. For performance it only checks the bounding boxes of the triangles in the navmesh, so it may cut triangles whoose bounding boxes it intersects even if the triangle does not intersect the extructed shape. However in most cases this does not make a large difference.
It is also possible to set the navmesh cut to dual mode by setting the #isDual field to true. This will prevent it from cutting a hole in the navmesh and it will instead just split the navmesh along the border but keep both the interior and the exterior. This can be useful if you for example want to change the penalty of some region which does not neatly line up with the navmesh triangles. It is often combined with the GraphUpdateScene component (however note that the GraphUpdateScene component will not automatically reapply the penalty if the graph is updated again).
By default the navmesh cut does not take rotation or scaling into account. If you want to do that, you can set the #useRotationAndScale field to true. This is a bit slower, but it is not a very large difference.