TITLE: GIB Games Universal Style Guide
AUTHOR: Toast <Sam@Gib.games>
VERSION: 1.1.9
UPDATE_DATE: 12/20/2023
1.1 Style
You should propose style guide changes to an existing style guide as well as this guide if you feel the change benefits all usages.
All structure, assets, and code in any project should look like a single person created it, no matter how many people contributed.
Moving from one project to another should not cause a re-learning of style and structure. Conforming to a style guide removes unneeded guesswork and ambiguities.
It also allows for more productive creation and maintenance as one does not need to think about style, simply follow instructions. This style guide is written with best practices in mind, meaning that by following this style guide you will also minimize hard to track issues.
If you see someone working either against a style guide or no style guide, try to correct them.
When working within a team or discussing within a community, it is far easier to help and to ask for help when people are consistent. Nobody likes to help untangle someone's spaghetti code or deal with assets with names they can't understand.
If you are helping someone who's work conforms to a different but consistent and sane style guide, you should be able to adapt to it. If they do not conform to any style guide, please direct them here.
Unity uses the term Prefab for a system that allows you to create, configure, and store a GameObject complete with all its components, property values, and child GameObjects as a reusable Asset.
Levels refer to what some people call maps or what Unity calls Scenes. A level contains a collection of objects.
Variables that are Serializable are shown in the Inspector window in Unity. For more information see Unity's documentation on Serializable.
There are a few different ways you can name things. Here are some common casing types:
Capitalize every word and remove all spaces, e.g.
DesertEagle
,StyleGuide
,ASeriesOfWords
.The first letter is always lowercase but every following word starts with uppercase, e.g.
desertEagle
,styleGuide
,aSeriesOfWords
.All letters are lowercase, e.g.
deserteagle
,Words can arbitrarily start upper or lowercase but words are separated by an underscore, e.g.
desert_Eagle
,Style_Guide
,a_Series_of_Words
.
The directory structure style of a project should be considered law. Asset naming conventions and content directory structure go hand in hand, and a violation of either causes unneeded chaos.
In this style, we will be using a structure that relies more on filtering and search abilities of the Project Window for those working with assets to find assets of a specific type instead of another common structure that groups asset types with folders.
_Developer
AssetResources
Documentation
[Project name]
Animations
Audio
Dialogue
Music
SFX
Incidental
Characters
FX
Particles
Rendering
Lighting
PostProcessing
Graphics
Prefabs
Props
Scenes
Scriptable Objects
Definitions
Scripts
Common
Editor
Gameplay
Input
Muto
Testing
Tools
UI
Cursors
Fonts
Sprites
Plugins
Resources
ScriptTemplates
StreamingAssets
The reasons for this structure are listed in the following sub-sections.
2.1 Folder Names
2.4 Levels
2.5 Define Ownership
2.7 Large Sets
2.8 Material Library
2.9 Scene Structure
These are common rules for naming any folder in the content structure.
Always Use PascalCase
PascalCase refers to starting a name with a capital letter and then instead of using spaces, every following word also starts with a capital letter. For example, DesertEagle
, RocketPistol
, and ASeriesOfWords
.
Re-enforcing 2.1.1, never use spaces. Spaces can cause various engineering tools and batch processes to fail. Ideally your project's root also contains no spaces and is located somewhere such as D:\Project
instead of C:\Users\My Name\My Documents\Unity Projects
.
If one of your game characters is named 'Zoë', its folder name should be Zoe
. Unicode characters can be worse than Spaces for engineering tools and some parts applications don't support Unicode characters in paths either.
Related to this, if your project has and your computer's user name has a Unicode character (i.e. your name is Zoë
), any project located in your My Documents
folder will suffer from this issue. Often simply moving your project to something like D:\Project
will fix these mysterious issues.
Using other characters outside a-z
, A-Z
, and 0-9
such as @
, -
, _
, ,
, *
, and #
can also lead to unexpected and hard to track issues on other platforms, source control, and weaker engineering tools.
There simply shouldn't be any empty folders. They clutter the content browser.
If you find that the content browser has an empty folder you can't delete, you should perform the following:
- Be sure you're using source control.
- Navigate to the folder on-disk and delete the assets inside.
- Close the editor.
- Make sure your source control state is in sync (i.e. if using Perforce, run a Reconcile Offline Work on your content directory)
- Open the editor. Confirm everything still works as expected. If it doesn't, revert, figure out what went wrong, and try again.
- Ensure the folder is now gone.
- Submit changes to source control.
All of a project's assets should exist in a folder named after the project. For example, if your project is named 'Generic Shooter', all of it's content should exist in Assets/GenericShooter
.
The
Developers
folder is not for assets that your project relies on and therefore is not project specific. See Developer Folders for details about this.
There are multiple reasons for this approach.
Often in code style guides it is written that you should not pollute the global namespace and this follows the same principle. When assets are allowed to exist outside of a project folder it often becomes much harder to enforce a strict structure layout as assets not in a folder encourages the bad behavior of not having to organize assets.
Every asset should have a purpose, otherwise it does not belong in a project. If an asset is an experimental test and shouldn't be used by the project it should be put in a Developer
folder.
When working on multiple projects it is common for a team to copy assets from one project to another if they have made something useful for both.
By placing all project specific assets in a top level folder you reduce the chance of migration conflict when importing those assets into a new project.
An extension to 2.2.2, if a team member decides to add sample content, template files, or assets they bought from a 3rd party, it is guaranteed that these new assets will not interfere with the project in any way unless your project's top level folder is not uniquely named.
You can not trust 3rd party content to fully conform to the top level folder rule. There exist many assets that have the majority of their content in a top level folder but also have possibly modified Unity sample content as well as level files polluting the global Assets
folder.
When adhering to 2.2, the worst 3rd party conflict you can have is if two 3rd party assets both have the same sample content. If all your assets are in a project specific folder, including sample content you may have moved into your folder, your project will never break.
If your project plans to release DLC or has multiple sub-projects associated with it that may either be migrated out or simply not cooked in a build, assets relating to these projects should have their own separate top level content folder. This make cooking DLC separate from main project content far easier. Sub-projects can also be migrated in and out with minimal effort. If you need to change a material of an asset or add some very specific asset override behavior in a patch, you can easily put these changes in a patch folder and work safely without the chance of breaking the core project.
During a project's development, it is very common for team members to have a sort of 'sandbox' where they can experiment freely without risking the core project. Because this work may be ongoing, these team members may wish to put their assets on a project's source control server. Not all teams require use of Developer folders, but ones that do use them often run into a common problem with assets submitted to source control.
It is very easy for a team member to accidentally use assets that are not ready for use which will cause issues once those assets are removed. For example, an artist may be iterating on a modular set of static meshes and still working on getting their sizing and grid snapping correct. If a world builder sees these assets in the main project folder, they might use them all over a level not knowing they could be subject to incredible change and/or removal. This causes massive amounts of re-working by everyone on the team to resolve.
If these modular assets were placed in a Developer folder, the world builder should never of had a reason to use them and the whole issue would never happen.
Once the assets are ready for use, an artist simply has to move the assets into the project specific folder. This is essentially 'promoting' the assets from experimental to production.
2.4 All Scene Files Belong In A Folder Called Levels
Level files are incredibly special and it is common for every project to have its own map naming system, especially if they work with sub-levels or streaming levels. No matter what system of map organization is in place for the specific project, all levels should belong in Assets/ProjectNameName/_Levels
.
Being able to tell someone to open a specific map without having to explain where it is is a great time saver and general 'quality of life' improvement. It is common for levels to be within sub-folders of Levels
, such as Levels/Campaign1/
or Levels/Arenas
, but the most important thing here is that they all exist within Assets/ProjectNameName/Levels
.
This also simplifies the job of cooking for engineers. Wrangling levels for a build process can be extremely frustrating if they have to dig through arbitrary folders for them. If a team's levels are all in one place, it is much harder to accidentally not cook a map in a build. It also simplifies lighting build scripts as well QA processes.
GIB Games projects use Semantic Versioning.
Versions are automatically updated on build. The version structure is:
[Major Version].[Minor Version].[Commits since last release]
This versioning is detected by the build system using Git tags.
All assets are assets.
All asset names are named with their asset type in mind. These folders offer only redundant information and the use of these folders can easily be replaced with the robust and easy to use filtering system the Content Browser provides.
Want to view only static mesh in Environment/Rocks/
? Simply turn on the Static Mesh filter. If all assets are named correctly, they will also be sorted in alphabetical order regardless of prefixes. Want to view both static meshes and skeletal meshes? Simply turn on both filters. this eliminates the need to potentially have to Control-Click
select two folders in the Content Browser's tree view.
This also extends the full path name of an asset for very little benefit. The
SM_
prefix for a static mesh is only three characters, whereasMeshes/
is seven characters.
Not doing this also prevents the inevitability of someone putting a static mesh or a texture in a Materials
folder.
This can be seen as a pseudo-exception to 2.6.
There are certain asset types that have a huge volume of related files where each asset has a unique purpose. The two most common are Animation and Audio assets. If you find yourself having 15+ of these assets that belong together, they should be together.
For example, animations that are shared across multiple characters should lay in Characters/Common/Animations
and may have sub-folders such as Locomotion
or Cinematic
.
This does not apply to assets like textures and materials. It is common for a
Rocks
folder to have a large amount of textures if there are a large amount of rocks, however these textures are generally only related to a few specific rocks and should be named appropriately. Even if these textures are part of a Material Library.
If the project makes use of master materials, layered materials, or any form of reusable materials or textures that do not belong to any subset of assets, these assets should be located in Assets/ProjectName/Graphics
.
This way all 'global' materials have a place to live and are easily located.
This also makes it incredibly easy to enforce a 'use material instances only' policy within a project. If all artists and assets should be using material instances, then the only regular material assets that should exist are within this folder. You can easily verify this by searching for base materials in any folder that isn't the
Graphics
.
The Graphics
folder doesn't have to consist of purely Graphics. Shared utility textures, material functions, and other things of this nature should be stored here as well within folders that designate their intended purpose. For example, generic noise textures should be located in Graphics/Utility
.
Any testing or debug materials should be within Graphics/Debug
. This allows debug materials to be easily stripped from a project before shipping and makes it incredibly apparent if production assets are using them if reference errors are shown.
Next to the project’s hierarchy, there’s also scene hierarchy. As before, we’ll present you a template. You can adjust it to your needs. Use named empty game objects as scene folders.
Debug Environment Management UI Behavior Objects _Dynamic
- All empty objects should be located at 0,0,0 with default rotation and scale.
- When you’re instantiating an object in runtime, make sure to put it in _Dynamic – do not pollute the root of your hierarchy or you will find it difficult to navigate through it.
This section will focus on C# classes and their internals. When possible, style rules conform to Microsoft's C# standard.
3.2 Compiling
3.3 Variables
3.4 Functions
Source files should contain only one public type, although multiple internal classes are allowed.
Source files should be given the name of the public class in the file.
Organize namespaces with a clearly defined structure,
Class members should be alphabetized, and grouped into sections:
- Constant Fields
- Static Fields
- Fields
- Constructors
- Properties
- Events / Delegates
- Unity Methods (Awake, OnEnable, Start, FixedUpdate)
- Public Methods
- Private Methods
- Enums
Within each of these groups order by access:
- public
- internal
- protected
- private
/**
* Copyright 2023 GIB Games Incorporated
* ScriptName.cs
* Created by: AuthorName
* Created on: Creation Date
*/
using UnityEngine;
namespace GIB
{
/// <summary>
/// Brief summary of what the class does
/// </summary>
public class ScriptName : MonoBehaviour
{
// Fields ================
public const string CONST_VARIABLE = "Constant Variable";
[Tooltip("Public variables set in the Inspector, should have a Tooltip")]
public static string StaticVariable;
/// <summary>
/// They should also have a summary
/// </summary>
public float PublicField;
[SerializeField]
private int serializedPrivateField;
private float _privateField;
// Properties =============
public string PublicProperty {get; set;}
public DateTime privateProperty {get; private set;}
// Methods ================
#region Unity Methods
public Awake()
{
// ...
}
#endregion
#region Public Methods
public AddObjectToBank()
{
// ...
}
#endregion
}
}
To save some time you can overwrite Unity's default script template with your own to automatically setup the namespace and regions etc. See this Unity support article to learn how.
Use a namespace to ensure your scoping of classes/enum/interface/etc won't conflict with existing ones from other namespaces or the global namespace. The project should at minimum use the projects name for the Namespace to prevent conflicts with any imported Third Party assets.
Simply, any function that has an access modifier of Public should have its summary filled out.
/// <summary>
/// Fire a gun
/// </summary>
public void Fire()
{
// Fire the gun.
}
If a class has only a small number of variables, Foldout Groups are not required.
If a class has a moderate amount of variables (5-10), all Serializable variables should have a non-default Foldout Group assigned. A common category is Config
. Use the Foldout Group Attribute available with Odin Inspector.
[FoldoutGroup("Interactable")]
public int MovementSpeed = 1;
Comments should be used to describe intention, algorithmic overview, and/or logical flow. It would be ideal if from reading the comments alone someone other than the author could understand a function’s intended behavior and general operation.
Place the comment on a separate line, not at the end of a line of code.
Begin comment text with an uppercase letter.
End comment text with a period.
Insert one space between the comment delimiter (//) and the comment text, as shown in the following example.
The // (two slashes) style of comment tags should be used in most situations. Where ever possible, place comments above the code instead of beside it. Here are some examples:
// Sample comment above a variable.
private int _myInt = 5;
The #region
directive enables you to collapse and hide sections of code in C# files. The ability to hide code selectively makes your files more manageable and easier to read.
#region "This is the code to be collapsed"
private components as System.ComponentModel.Container
#endregion
Do use a single space after a comma between function arguments.
Example: Console.In.Read(myChar, 0, 1);
- Do not use a space after the parenthesis and function arguments.
- Do not use spaces between a function name and parenthesis.
- Do not use spaces inside brackets.
All scripts should compile with zero warnings and zero errors. You should fix script warnings and errors immediately as they can quickly cascade into very scary unexpected behavior.
Do not submit broken scripts to source control. If you must store them on source control, shelve them instead.
The words variable
and property
may be used interchangeably.
All non-boolean variable names must be clear, unambiguous, and descriptive nouns.
Constant variables should be in UPPER_CASE.
All variables use PascalCase unless marked as private which use camelCase.
Use PascalCase for abbreviations of 4 characters or more (3 chars are both uppercase).
All variable names must not be redundant with their context as all variable references in the class will always have context.
Consider a Class called PlayerCharacter
.
Bad
PlayerScore
PlayerKills
MyTargetPlayer
MyCharacterName
CharacterSkills
ChosenCharacterSkin
All of these variables are named redundantly. It is implied that the variable is representative of the PlayerCharacter
it belongs to because it is PlayerCharacter
that is defining these variables.
Good
Score
Kills
TargetPlayer
Name
Skills
Skin
In C#, variables have a concept of access level. Public means any code outside the class can access the variable. Protected means only the class and any child classes can access this variable internally. Private means only this class and no child classes can access this variable.
Variables should only be made public if necessary. Prefer to use the attribute [SerializeField]
instead of making a variable public.
Local variables should use camelCase.
Use implicit typing for local variables when the type of the variable is obvious from the right side of the assignment, or when the precise type is not important:
var var1 = "This is clearly a string.";
var var2 = 27;
var var3 = Convert.ToInt32(Console.ReadLine());
// Also used in for loops
for (var i = 0; i < bountyHunterFleets.Length; ++i) {};
Do not use var when the type is not apparent from the right side of the assignment. Example:
int var4 = ExampleClass.ResultSoFar();
Serialized private variables and private members that are part of a publicly settable property should use camelCase:
[SerializeField] private Animator thisAnimator;
private Transform sourceTransform;
public Transform SourceTransform => sourceTransform;
Non-serialized private variables and private members that are not publicly settable should also be prefixed by an underscore.
private Animator _animator
Public Animator MyAnimator { get { return _animator; } private set; }
Unless it is known that a variable needs to be public, it should be set to private until it is able to be marked as protected
or made public
(if absolutely necessary).
Do not use Hungarian notation or any other type identification in identifiers:
// Correct
int counter;
string name;
// Avoid
int iCounter;
string strName;
All Serializable variables should have a description in their [Tooltip]
fields that explains how changing this value affects the behavior of the script.
Make use of Odin Inspector's Infobox Attribute or a similar function when able.
All Serializable variables should make use of slider and value ranges if there is ever a value that a variable should not be set to.
Example: A script that generates fence posts might have an editable variable named PostsCount
and a value of -1 would not make any sense. Use the range fields [Range(min, max)]
to mark 0 as a minimum.
If an editable variable is used in a Construction Script, it should have a reasonable Slider Range defined so that someone can not accidentally assign it a large value that could crash the editor.
All booleans should be named in PascalCase but prefixed with a verb.
Example: Use isDead
and hasItem
, not Dead
and Item
.
All booleans should be named as descriptive adjectives when possible if representing general information.
Do not use booleans to represent complex and/or dependent states. This makes state adding and removing complex and no longer easily readable. Use an enumeration instead.
Example: When defining a weapon, do not use isReloading
and isEquipping
if a weapon can't be both reloading and equipping. Define an enumeration named WeaponState
and use a variable with this type named WeaponState
instead. This makes it far easier to add new states to weapons.
Enums use PascalCase and use singular names for enums and their values. Exception: bit field enums should be plural. Enums can be placed outside the class space to provide global access.
Example:
public enum WeaponType
{
Knife,
Gun
}
// Enum can have multiple values
[Flags]
public enum Dockings
{
None = 0,
Top = 1,
}
public WeaponType Weapon
Arrays follow the same naming rules as above, but should be named as a plural noun.
Example: Use Targets
, Hats
, and EnemyPlayers
, not TargetList
, HatArray
, EnemyPlayerArray
.
Interfaces are led with a capital I
then followed with PascalCase. Most Interfaces should be adjectival: IEatable
, IDestructible
, etc.
Example: public interface IEdible { }
This section describes how you should author functions, events, and event dispatchers. Everything that applies to functions also applies to events, unless otherwise noted.
The naming of functions, events, and event dispatchers is critically important. Based on the name alone, certain assumptions can be made about functions. For example:
- Is it a pure function?
- Is it fetching state information?
- Is it a handler?
- What is its purpose?
These questions and more can all be answered when functions are named appropriately.
All functions and events perform some form of action, whether its getting info, calculating data, or causing something to explode. Therefore, all functions should start with verbs. They should be worded in the present tense whenever possible. They should also have some context as to what they are doing.
Good examples:
Fire
- Good example if in a Character / Weapon class, as it has context. Bad if in a Barrel / Grass / any ambiguous class.Jump
- Good example if in a Character class, otherwise, needs context.Explode
ReceiveMessage
SortPlayerArray
GetArmOffset
GetCoordinates
UpdateTransforms
EnableBigHeadMode
IsEnemy
- "Is" is a verb.
Bad examples:
Dead
- Is Dead? Will deaden?Rock
ProcessData
- Ambiguous, these words mean nothing.PlayerState
- Nouns are ambiguous.Color
- Verb with no context, or ambiguous noun.
When writing a function that does not change the state of or modify any object and is purely for getting information, state, or computing a yes/no value, it should ask a question. This should also follow the verb rule.
This is extremely important as if a question is not asked, it may be assumed that the function performs an action and is returning whether that action succeeded.
Good examples:
IsDead
IsOnFire
IsAlive
IsSpeaking
IsHavingAnExistentialCrisis
IsVisible
HasWeapon
- "Has" is a verb.WasCharging
- "Was" is past-tense of "be". Use "was" when referring to 'previous frame' or 'previous state'.CanReload
- "Can" is a verb.
Bad examples:
Fire
- Is on fire? Will fire? Do fire?OnFire
- Can be confused with event dispatcher for firing.Dead
- Is dead? Will deaden?Visibility
- Is visible? Set visibility? A description of flying conditions?
Any function that handles an event or dispatches an event should start with On
and continue to follow the verb rule.
Good examples:
OnDeath
- Common collocation in gamesOnPickup
OnReceiveMessage
OnMessageRecieved
OnTargetChanged
OnClick
OnLeave
Bad examples:
OnData
OnTarget
Naming conventions should be treated as law. A project that conforms to a naming convention is able to have its assets managed, searched, parsed, and maintained with incredible ease.
Most things are prefixed with the prefix generally being an acronym of the asset type followed by an underscore.
Assets use PascalCase
All assets should have a Base Asset Name. A Base Asset Name represents a logical grouping of related assets. Any asset that is part of this logical group
should follow the the standard of Prefix_BaseAssetName_Variant_Suffix
.
Keeping the pattern Prefix_BaseAssetName_Variant_Suffix
in mind and using common sense is generally enough to warrant good asset names. Here are some detailed rules regarding each element.
Prefix
and Suffix
are to be determined by the asset type through the following Asset Name Modifier tables.
BaseAssetName
should be determined by short and easily recognizable name related to the context of this group of assets. For example, if you had a character named Bob, all of Bob's assets would have the BaseAssetName
of Bob
.
For unique and specific variations of assets, Variant
is either a short and easily recognizable name that represents logical grouping of assets that are a subset of an asset's base name. For example, if Bob had multiple skins these skins should still use Bob
as the BaseAssetName
but include a recognizable Variant
. An 'Evil' skin would be referred to as Bob_Evil
and a 'Retro' skin would be referred to as Bob_Retro
.
For unique but generic variations of assets, Variant
is a two digit number starting at 01
. For example, if you have an environment artist generating nondescript rocks, they would be named Rock_01
, Rock_02
, Rock_03
, etc. Except for rare exceptions, you should never require a three digit variant number. If you have more than 100 assets, you should consider organizing them with different base names or using multiple variant names.
Depending on how your asset variants are made, you can chain together variant names. For example, if you are creating flooring assets for an Arch Viz project you should use the base name Flooring
with chained variants such as Flooring_Marble_01
, Flooring_Maple_01
, Flooring_Tile_Squares_01
.
Asset Type | Asset Name |
---|---|
Skeletal Mesh | SK_Bob |
Material | M_Bob |
Texture (Diffuse/Albedo) | T_Bob_D |
Texture (Normal) | T_Bob_N |
Texture (Evil Diffuse) | T_Bob_Evil_D |
Asset Type | Asset Name |
---|---|
Static Mesh (01) | SM_Rock_01 |
Static Mesh (02) | SM_Rock_02 |
Static Mesh (03) | SM_Rock_03 |
Material | M_Rock |
Material Instance (Snow) | MI_Rock_Snow |
When naming an asset use these tables to determine the prefix and suffix to use with an asset's Base Asset Name.
4.2.1 Most Common
4.2.2 Animations
4.2.3 Artificial Intelligence
4.2.4 Prefabs
4.2.5 Materials
4.2.6 Textures
4.2.7 Miscellaneous
4.2.8 Physics
4.2.9 Audio
4.2.10 User Interface
4.2.11 Effects
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Level / Scene | * | Should be in a folder called Levels. e.g. Levels/A4_C17_Parking_Garage.unity |
|
Level (Persistent) | _P | ||
Level (Audio) | _Audio | ||
Level (Lighting) | _Lighting | ||
Level (Geometry) | _Geo | ||
Level (Gameplay) | _Gameplay | ||
Prefab | |||
Material | M_ | ||
Static Mesh | SM_ | ||
Skeletal Mesh | SK_ | ||
Texture | T_ | _? | See Textures |
Particle System | PS_ |
PascalCase
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Characters | CH_ | ||
Vehicles | VH_ | ||
Weapons | WP_ | ||
Static Mesh | SM_ | ||
Skeletal Mesh | SK_ | ||
Skeleton | SKEL_ | ||
Rig | RIG_ |
All meshes in 3ds Max are lowercase to differentiate them from their FBX export.
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Mesh | _mesh_lod0* | Only use LOD suffix if model uses LOD's | |
Mesh Collider | _collider |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Animation Clip | A_ | ||
Animation Controller | AC_ | ||
Avatar Mask | AM_ | ||
Morph Target | MT_ |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
AI Controller | AIC_ | ||
Behavior Tree | BT_ | ||
Blackboard | BB_ | ||
Decorator | BTDecorator_ | ||
Service | BTService_ | ||
Task | BTTask_ | ||
Environment Query | EQS_ | ||
EnvQueryContext | EQS_ | Context |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Prefab | |||
Prefab Instance | I | ||
Scriptable Object | Assigned "Blueprint" label in Editor |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Material | M_ | ||
Material Instance | MI_ | ||
Physical Material | PM_ |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Texture | T_ | ||
Texture (Diffuse/Albedo/Base Color) | T_ | _D | |
Texture (Normal) | T_ | _N | |
Texture (Roughness) | T_ | _R | |
Texture (Alpha/Opacity) | T_ | _A | |
Texture (Ambient Occlusion) | T_ | _AO | |
Texture (Bump) | T_ | _B | |
Texture (Emissive) | T_ | _E | |
Texture (Mask) | T_ | _M | |
Texture (Specular) | T_ | _S | |
Texture (Packed) | T_ | _* | See notes below about packing. |
Texture Cube | TC_ | ||
Media Texture | MT_ | ||
Render Target | RT_ | ||
Cube Render Target | RTC_ | ||
Texture Light Profile | TLP_ |
It is common practice to pack multiple layers of texture data into one texture. An example of this is packing Emissive, Roughness, Ambient Occlusion together as the Red, Green, and Blue channels of a texture respectively. To determine the suffix, simply stack the given suffix letters from above together, e.g. _ERO
.
It is generally acceptable to include an Alpha/Opacity layer in your Diffuse/Albedo's alpha channel and as this is common practice, adding
A
to the_D
suffix is optional.
Packing 4 channels of data into a texture (RGBA) is not recommended except for an Alpha/Opacity mask in the Diffuse/Albedo's alpha channel as a texture with an alpha channel incurs more overhead than one without.
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Universal Render Pipeline Asset | URP_ | ||
Post Process Volume Profile | PP_ | ||
User Interface | UI_ |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Physical Material | PM_ |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Audio Clip | A_ | ||
Audio Mixer | MIX_ | ||
Dialogue Voice | DV_ | ||
Audio Class | No prefix/suffix. Should be put in a folder called AudioClasses |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Font | Font_ | ||
Texture (Sprite) | T_ | _GUI |
Asset Type | Prefix | Suffix | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Particle System | PS_ | ||
⬆ Back to Top |
This section describes best practices for managing the Git Repository.
5.1 Branches
5.3 Descriptions
5.4 Tags
Git branches are broadly classified into two categories:
Regular Git branches are those branches that are permanently available in your repositories. These can be further classified into three categories namely Dev branch, master branch, and QA branch or test branch.
-
The Dev branch is the development branch that is used by developers to develop any new feature. The developers can not directly write code in the master branch as the master branch is the production branch. When the code in the dev branch undergoes reviews and testing then only it is merged into the main branch.
-
The QA branch or the test ranch is used for QA testing and automation testing before merging any code to production.
-
The Main branch is the default branch in the Git repository. The master branch is the life of the production branch which is deployed to production. The Master branch should be stable every time and before any merging, any code from the dev branch to the master branch must undergo rigorous testing and verification.
Temporary Git branches are the branches that are created and deleted as per requirement. They are not present permanently in the repository.
They can be classified into the following branches
- Bug Fix
- Hot Fix
- Feature Branches
- Release Branches
- Experimental Branches
- WIP branches
Temporary branch names should be formatted as:
[Class]/branch-name
For example:
bugfix/ui-reference-errors-fix
feature/add-gun-sounds
The branch name should start with a group word that signifies the purpose of the branch.
A commit message should start with a category of change. You can pretty much use the following 4 categories for everything: feat, fix, refactor, and chore.
- build: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
- feature or task: changed or added content or features
- fix: fixing a bug
- code or refactor: changing code for peformance or convenience purpose (e.g. readibility)
- misc or chore: everything else (writing documentation, formatting, adding tests, cleaning useless code etc.)
After the category, there should be a ":" announcing the commit description.
After the colon, the commit description should consist in short statements describing the changes.
Each statement should start with a verb conjugated in an imperative way. Statements should be seperated from themselves with a ";".
To sum up, follow this pattern when committing:
category: do something; do some other things
For each build release, the commit of that build should have a git tag added in the format v#.#
. This tag is used for build versioning.
This section describes best practices for creating and importing assets usable in Unity.
6.1 Unity Asset Import Settings
6.2 3ds Max
6.3 Textures
6.4 Audio
Unity's AssetPostprocessor lets you hook into the import pipeline and run scripts prior to or after importing assets. This allows you to enforce import settings when assets are first imported into the project. For example textures that end with _N
can be marked as a Normal Map on import.
Example guide for Import Settings:
https://github.com/justinwasilenko/Unity-AssetPostProcessor
Unity guide on importing from 3ds Max:
https://docs.unity3d.com/2017.4/Documentation/Manual/HOWTO-ImportObjectMax.html
Unity tutorial on the FBX Exporter Package for FBX roundtrip:
https://learn.unity.com/project/3ds-max-to-unity-pipeline
Unity uses 1 unit = 1 meter. Setup 3ds Max to use Meters by going to Customize/Units Setup/System Unit Setup
and set to 1 Unit = 1 Meter. Using the correct scale is very important for correct Physics / GI / and VR interaction.
Animation frame rate in 3ds Max should be set to 30fps. The Time Configuration
dialog box has 3ds Max's FPS settings
-
Set
Customize > Customize User Interface > Mouse Wheel Zoom Increment
to 0.1m to stop over zooming -
Turn on Viewport Clipping and set the slider on the side of the viewport to be able to zoom in on small meshes. (https://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/3ds-max/learn-explore/caas/sfdcarticles/sfdcarticles/Viewport-Clipping.html)
- Follow the asset naming convention
- Avoid super long thin triangles (Speeds up tile based renderers & helps with proper GI baking)
- Use Area and Angle Weighted Mesh Normals (Unity Import Setting or Create in 3ds Max)
- Triangulate On
- Tangents and Binormals Off
- Smoothing Groups On
- Preserve edge orientation On
- Units - Automatic Off / Scene Units converted to Meters
- Axis Conversion Z-up
Models created in 3ds Max use a different coordinate system then Unity. Models need to have their pivot point rotated +90 degrees on the X axis to import into Unity correctly.
To do this quickly, open the MaxScript editor, paste this code and select and drag this code on to a Toolbar in 3ds Max to create a button that will run this script. It applies a Xform modifier to rotate the pivot before exporting.
fn RotateCreationPivot obj rot =
(
select obj
modPanel.addModToSelection (XForm ()) ui:on
obj.modifiers[#XForm].gizmo.rotation += rot as quat
rotate obj (inverse rot as quat)
)
RotateCreationPivot $ (eulerToQuat(eulerAngles 90 0 0))
Script to rotate all objects in 3ds Max scene for export
(
mapped fn ProcessObjectsForUnity node =
(
resetxform node
tm = rotatexmatrix 90
tm.row4 = node.pos
node.transform = tm
node.objectoffsetrot = eulerangles -90 0 0
)
ProcessObjectsForUnity geometry
)
- Batch Exporter for 3ds Max (http://www.strichnet.com/improving-the-fbx-workflow-between-3ds-max-and-unity3d/)
Bind normal bones to the CAT rig for use in skinning and exporting
Set Motion Panel/Layer Manager/"Setup/Animation Mode" Toggle to Red
Select only the bones and the mesh you wish to export
Export naming: ModelName.FBX
Set Motion Panel/Layer Manager/"Setup/Animation Mode" to Green
Select ONLY the bones required in your hierarchy (These should match the exact same bones used for Bind Pose), don't include the mesh.
Export naming: ModelName@AnimationName.FBX
The @ symbol is a special Unity naming convention allowing the animation to be bound to the Human.fbx in the Unity editor
If importing only animation or bones from a FBX:
- Set
Preserve Hierarchy Model
import option toTrue
- Set
Rig > Avatar Definition
toCopy From Other Avatar
MaxListener Window, set width and height of selected bones, maybe objects too?
- Textures follow the naming convention found above.
- They are a power of two (For example, 512 x 512 or 256 x 1024).
- Use Texture Atlases wherever possible.
- 3D software should point to the Unity project textures for consistency when you save or export.
- It is better to resize the texture in Photoshop then to use Unity’s compression options when the in game texture resolution is already known. This reduces the file size and import time of the texture into Unity.
- When working with a high-resolution source PSD outside your Unity project use the same name for both the high-resolution and the imported Unity file. This allows quick iteration when swapping between the 2 textures.
More information for importing textures can be found here: https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/ImportingTextures.html
Textures requiring the use of a Alpha channel should follow this guide: https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/HOWTO-alphamaps.html
All textures should be of the .TIF (Preferred) or .PNG format. No layers should be included and only one Alpha channel in the imported file.
Only import uncompressed audio files in to Unity using WAV or AIFF formats.
Great guide on Unity Audio Import Optimization
https://unity3d.com/learn/tutorials/topics/tips/large-project-organisation https://github.com/Allar/ue4-style-guide http://www.arreverie.com/blogs/unity3d-best-practices-folder-structure-source-control/