Subshaders use tags to tell how and when they expect to be rendered to the renderingThe process of drawing graphics to the screen (or to a render texture). By default, the main camera in Unity renders its view to the screen. More info
See in Glossary engine.
Tags { "TagName1" = "Value1" "TagName2" = "Value2" }
Specifies TagName1 to have Value1, TagName2 to have Value2. You can have as many tags as you like.
Tags are basically key-value pairs. Inside a SubShaderEach shader in Unity consists of a list of subshaders. When Unity has to display a mesh, it will find the shader to use, and pick the first subshader that runs on the user’s graphics card. More info
See in Glossary tags are used to determine rendering order and other parameters of a subshader. Note that the following tags recognized by Unity must be inside SubShader section and not inside Pass!
In addition to built-in tags recognized by Unity, you can use your own tags and query them using Material.GetTag function.
You can determine in which order your objects are drawn using the Queue tag. A ShaderA small script that contains the mathematical calculations and algorithms for calculating the Color of each pixel rendered, based on the lighting input and the Material configuration. More info
See in Glossary decides which render queue its objects belong to, this way any Transparent shaders make sure they are drawn after all opaque objects and so on.
There are four pre-defined render queues, but there can be more queues in between the predefined ones. The predefined queues are:
Background
- this render queue is rendered before any others. You’d typically use this for things that really need to be in the background.Geometry
(default) - this is used for most objects. Opaque geometry uses this queue.AlphaTest
- alpha tested geometry uses this queue. It’s a separate queue from Geometry
one since it’s more efficient to render alpha-tested objects after all solid ones are drawn.Transparent
- this render queue is rendered after Geometry and AlphaTest
, in back-to-front order. Anything alpha-blended (i.e. shaders that don’t write to depth buffer) should go here (glass, particle effects).Overlay
- this render queue is meant for overlay effects. Anything rendered last should go here (e.g. lens flares).Shader "Transparent Queue Example"
{
SubShader
{
Tags { "Queue" = "Transparent" }
Pass
{
// rest of the shader body...
}
}
}
An example illustrating how to render something in the transparent queue
For special uses in-between queues can be used. Internally each queue is represented by integer index; Background
is 1000, Geometry
is 2000, AlphaTest
is 2450, Transparent
is 3000 and Overlay
is 4000. If a shader uses a queue like this:
Tags { "Queue" = "Geometry+1" }
This will make the object be rendered after all opaque objects, but before transparent objects, as render queue index will be 2001 (geometry plus one). This is useful in situations where you want some objects be always drawn between other sets of objects. For example, in most cases transparent water should be drawn after opaque objects but before transparent objects.
Queues up to 2500 (“Geometry+500”) are consided “opaque” and optimize the drawing order of the objects for best performance. Higher rendering queues are considered for “transparent objects” and sort objects by distance, starting rendering from the furthest ones and ending with the closest ones. Skyboxes are drawn in between all opaque and all transparent objects.
RenderType
tag categorizes shaders into several predefined groups, e.g. is is an opaque shader, or an alpha-tested shader etc. This is used by Shader Replacement and in some cases used to produce camera’s depth texture.
Some shaders (mostly ones that do object-space vertex deformations) do not work when Draw Call Batching is used – that’s because batching transforms all geometry into world space, so “object space” is lost.
DisableBatching
tag can be used to indicate that. There are three possible values: “True” (always disables batching for this shader), “False” (does not disable batching; this is default) and “LODFading” (disable batching when LOD fading is active; mostly used on trees).
If ForceNoShadowCasting
tag is given and has a value of “True”, then an object that is rendered using this subshader will never cast shadows. This is mostly useful when you are using shader replacement on transparent objects and you do not wont to inherit a shadow pass from another subshader.
If IgnoreProjector
tag is given and has a value of “True”, then an object that uses this shader will not be affected by Projectors. This is mostly useful on semitransparent objects, because there is no good way for Projectors to affect them.
Set CanUseSpriteAtlas
tag to “False” if the shader is meant for spritesA 2D graphic objects. If you are used to working in 3D, Sprites are essentially just standard textures but there are special techniques for combining and managing sprite textures for efficiency and convenience during development. More info
See in Glossary, and will not work when they are packed into atlases (see Sprite PackerA facility that packs graphics from several sprite textures tightly together within a single texture known as an atlas. Unity provides a Sprite Packer utility to automate the process of generating atlases from the individual sprite textures. More info
See in Glossary).
PreviewType
indicates how the material inspectorA Unity window that displays information about the currently selected GameObject, asset or project settings, allowing you to inspect and edit the values. More info
See in Glossary preview should display the material. By default materials are displayed as spheres, but PreviewType can also be set to “Plane” (will display as 2D) or “SkyboxA special type of Material used to represent skies. Usually six-sided. More info
See in Glossary” (will display as skybox).
Passes can be given Tags as well, see Pass Tags.