Adding this component to an object will make sure it is included in any recast graphs. It will be included even if the Rasterize Meshes toggle is set to false.
Using RecastMeshObjs instead of relying on the Rasterize Meshes option is good for several reasons.
Rasterize Meshes is slow. If you are using a tiled graph and you are updating it, every time something is recalculated the graph will have to search all meshes in your scene for ones to rasterize, in contrast, RecastMeshObjs are stored in a tree for extremely fast lookup (O(log n + k) compared to O(n) where n is the number of meshes in your scene and k is the number of meshes which should be rasterized, if you know Big-O notation).
The RecastMeshObj exposes some options which can not be accessed using the Rasterize Meshes toggle. See member documentation for more info. This can for example be used to include meshes in the recast graph rasterization, but make sure that the character cannot walk on them.
Since the objects are stored in a tree, and trees are slow to update, there is an enforcement that objects are not allowed to move unless the dynamic option is enabled. When the dynamic option is enabled, the object will be stored in an array instead of in the tree. This will reduce the performance improvement over 'Rasterize Meshes' but is still faster.
If a mesh filter and a mesh renderer is attached to this GameObject, those will be used in the rasterization otherwise if a collider is attached, that will be used.
Public Methods
GetBounds
()
Bounds completely enclosing the mesh for this object.
Recalculation of bounding box trees is expensive so if this is true, the object will simply be stored in an array. Easier to move, but slower lookup, so use wisely. If you for some reason want to move it, but don't want it dynamic (maybe you will only move it veery seldom and have lots of similar objects so they would add overhead by being dynamic). You can enable and disable the component every time you move it. Disabling it will remove it from the bounding box tree and enabling it will add it to the bounding box tree again.
The object should never move unless being dynamic or disabling/enabling it as described above.
This area (not to be confused with pathfinding areas, this is only used when rasterizing meshes for the recast graph) field can be used to explicitly insert edges in the navmesh geometry or to make some parts of the mesh unwalkable.
When rasterizing the world and two objects with different surface id values are adjacent to each other, a split in the navmesh geometry will be added between them, characters will still be able to walk between them, but this can be useful when working with navmesh updates.
Navmesh updates which recalculate a whole tile (updatePhysics=True) are very slow So if there are special places which you know are going to be updated quite often, for example at a door opening (opened/closed door) you can use surface IDs to create splits on the navmesh for easier updating using normal graph updates (updatePhysics=False). See the below video for more information.
Note
This only has an effect if mode is set to Mode.WalkableSurfaceWithCustomID
Only non-negative values are valid.
Public Enums
Mode
Public
Mode
ExcludeFromGraph
This object will be completely ignored by the graph.
UnwalkableSurface
All surfaces on this mesh will be made unwalkable.
WalkableSurface
All surfaces on this mesh will be walkable.
WalkableSurfaceWithCustomID
All surfaces on this mesh will be walkable and a seam will be created between the surfaces on this mesh and the surfaces on other meshes (with a different surface id)
Private/Protected Members
_dynamic
Private
bool
_dynamic
Awake
()
Protected
void
Awake ()
dynamicMeshObjs
Dynamic objects are stored in a list since it is costly to update the tree every time they move.
Static objects are stored in a tree for fast bounds lookups.
Deprecated Members
area
Voxel area for mesh.
Public
int
area
Voxel area for mesh.
This area (not to be confused with pathfinding areas, this is only used when rasterizing meshes for the recast graph) field can be used to explicitly insert edges in the navmesh geometry or to make some parts of the mesh unwalkable.
When rasterizing the world and two objects with different surface id values are adjacent to each other, a split in the navmesh geometry will be added between them, characters will still be able to walk between them, but this can be useful when working with navmesh updates.
Navmesh updates which recalculate a whole tile (updatePhysics=True) are very slow So if there are special places which you know are going to be updated quite often, for example at a door opening (opened/closed door) you can use surface IDs to create splits on the navmesh for easier updating using normal graph updates (updatePhysics=False). See the below video for more information.