Texture3D.SetPixel

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Declaration

public void SetPixel(int x, int y, int z, Color color, int mipLevel = 0);

Parameters

x The x coordinate of the pixel to set. The range is 0 through the (texture width - 1).
y The y coordinate of the pixel to set. The range is 0 through the (texture height - 1).
z The z coordinate of the pixel to set. The range is 0 through the (texture depth - 1).
color The color to set.
mipLevel The mipmap level to write to. The range is 0 through the texture's Texture.mipmapCount. The default value is 0.

Description

Sets the pixel color at coordinates (x, y, z).

This method sets pixel data for the texture in CPU memory. Texture.isReadable must be true, and you must call Apply after SetPixel to upload the changed pixels to the GPU.

Apply is an expensive operation because it copies all the pixels in the texture even if you've only changed some of the pixels, so change as many pixels as possible before you call it.

SetPixel might be slower than some other texture methods because it converts the Color struct into the format the texture uses. To set pixel data more quickly, use SetPixelData instead.

The lower left corner is (0, 0, 0). If the pixel coordinate is outside the texture's dimensions, Unity clamps or repeats it, depending on the texture's TextureWrapMode.

If you need to get a large block of pixels, it might be faster to use SetPixels32.

You can use SetPixel with the following texture formats:

  • Alpha8
  • ARGB32
  • ARGB4444
  • BGRA32
  • R16
  • R8
  • RFloat
  • RG16
  • RG32
  • RGB24
  • RGB48
  • RGB565
  • RGB9e5Float
  • RGBA32
  • RGBA4444
  • RGBA64
  • RGBAFloat
  • RGBAHalf
  • RGFloat
  • RGHalf
  • RHalf

For all other formats, Unity ignores SetPixel.

Additional resources: SetPixels, SetPixelData, GetPixel, Apply.


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