|
Name | Description |
---|---|
id | A unique ID to use for each window. This is the ID you'll use to interface to it. |
screenRect | Rectangle on the screen to use for the window. The layouting system will attempt to fit the window inside it - if that cannot be done, it will adjust the rectangle to fit. |
func | The function that creates the GUI inside the window. This function must take one parameter - the id of the window it's currently making GUI for. |
text | Text to display as a title for the window. |
image | Texture to display an image in the titlebar. |
content | Text, image and tooltip for this window. |
style | An optional style to use for the window. If left out, the window style from the current GUISkin is used. |
options |
An optional list of layout options that specify extra layouting properties. Any values passed in here will override settings defined by the style or the screenRect you pass in. See Also: GUILayout.Width, GUILayout.Height, GUILayout.MinWidth, GUILayout.MaxWidth, GUILayout.MinHeight, GUILayout.MaxHeight, GUILayout.ExpandWidth, GUILayout.ExpandHeight. |
Rect - the rectangle the window is at. This can be in a different position and have a different size than the one you passed in.
Make a popup window that layouts its contents automatically.
Windows float above normal GUI controls, feature click-to-focus and can optionally be dragged around by the end user. Unlike other controls, you need to pass them a separate function for the GUI controls to put inside the window. Here is a small example to get you started:
Window in the Game View.
var windowRect : Rect = Rect (20, 20, 120, 50);
function OnGUI () {
// Register the window. Notice the 3rd parameter
windowRect = GUILayout.Window (0, windowRect, DoMyWindow, "My Window");
}
// Make the contents of the window
function DoMyWindow (windowID : int) {
// This button will size to fit the window
if (GUILayout.Button ("Hello World"))
print ("Got a click");
}
using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;
public class example : MonoBehaviour {
public Rect windowRect = new Rect(20, 20, 120, 50);
void OnGUI() {
windowRect = GUILayout.Window(0, windowRect, DoMyWindow, "My Window");
}
void DoMyWindow(int windowID) {
if (GUILayout.Button("Hello World"))
print("Got a click");
}
}
import UnityEngine
import System.Collections
class example(MonoBehaviour):
public windowRect as Rect = Rect(20, 20, 120, 50)
def OnGUI():
windowRect = GUILayout.Window(0, windowRect, DoMyWindow, 'My Window')
def DoMyWindow(windowID as int):
if GUILayout.Button('Hello World'):
print('Got a click')
The screen rectangle you pass in to the function only acts as a guide. To Apply extra limits to the window, pass in some extra layout options. The ones applied here will override the size calculated. Here is a small example:
var windowRect : Rect = Rect (20, 20, 120, 50);
function OnGUI () {
// Register the window. Here we instruct the layout system to
// make the window 100 pixels wide no matter what.
windowRect = GUILayout.Window (
0, windowRect, DoMyWindow, "My Window", GUILayout.Width (100));
}
// Make the contents of the window
function DoMyWindow (windowID : int) {
// This button is too large to fit the window
// Normally, the window would have been expanded to fit the button, but due to
// the GUILayout.Width call above the window will only ever be 100 pixels wide
if (GUILayout.Button ("Please click me a lot"))
print ("Got a click");
}
using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;
public class example : MonoBehaviour {
public Rect windowRect = new Rect(20, 20, 120, 50);
void OnGUI() {
windowRect = GUILayout.Window(0, windowRect, DoMyWindow, "My Window", GUILayout.Width(100));
}
void DoMyWindow(int windowID) {
if (GUILayout.Button("Please click me a lot"))
print("Got a click");
}
}
import UnityEngine
import System.Collections
class example(MonoBehaviour):
public windowRect as Rect = Rect(20, 20, 120, 50)
def OnGUI():
windowRect = GUILayout.Window(0, windowRect, DoMyWindow, 'My Window', GUILayout.Width(100))
def DoMyWindow(windowID as int):
if GUILayout.Button('Please click me a lot'):
print('Got a click')