Glossary
Enumeration
The enum keyword is used to declare an enumeration-type, which creates a distinct type that consists of a set of named constants called the enumerator list. Since enums
are constant values, once they have been defined, they can't be modified within code. The underlying data-type for enums
is int
. To use an enum, first define a varialble of the enum-type, then use dot notation to assign a particular enum value to the variable: Enum: MSDN Reference
Interface
Inheritance
In C#, a child class can inherit from a parent / base class. The syntax uses a colon : in the class definition to indicate a class, MyChildClass
is inheriting from a ParentClass
. In C#, the same syntax is used to indicate that a class is implementing an Interface. The convention is that all interface names should begin with the letter I
. A child class can only inherit from a single base class. A C# class can implement any number of interfaces.
class MyChildClass: ParentClass { // class definition code }
C# Generic Types < T >
Generics introduce the concept of type parameters to the .NET Framework, which make it possible to design classes and methods that defer the specification of one or more types until the class or method is declared and instantiated by client code. MSDN Reference
Unity Example: GetComponent < T >( )
C# Static
The keyword static
, when applied to a property, variable, method, means that the element belongs to the class itself, and not an object instance of the class.
Example: Class: Mathf, method: Abs( float val )
SerializeField Attribute
SerializeField attribute allows you to have private script variables that will be visible in the Inspector. This allows setting values in the editor without giving access to the variable from within other scripts.
Random Numbers in Unity
Unity Manual: Using Random Numbers
Choosing a Random Item from an Array - We could refactor Spawner so that it randomly selects elements from an array of prefabs. Picking an array element at random boils down to choosing a random integer between zero and the array’s maximum index value (which is equal to the length of the array minus one). This is easily done using the built-in Random.Range function:-
Note that Random.Range returns a value from a range that includes the first parameter but excludes the second, so using myArray.Length, or myList.Count here gives the correct result.
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