Version: Unity 6 (6000.0)
Language : English
Position element with the layout engine
Set background images

Relative and absolute positioning

This example demonstrates the difference between relative and absolute positioning. This example also demonstrates how to use C# and UXML/USS to add and style UI(User Interface) Allows a user to interact with your application. Unity currently supports three UI systems. More info
See in Glossary
controls.

Example overview

The example uses the automatic layout system to add boxes to an Editor and a runtime UI. One box demonstrates a relative offset of 25 px, while another box demonstrates the absolute position of 25 px, 25 px.

The example structures the Editor UI with C# script and the runtime UI with UXML and CSS.

Visual element positioning
Visual element positioning

You can find the completed files that this example creates in this GitHub repository.

Prerequisites

This guide is for developers familiar with the Unity Editor, UI Toolkit, and C# scripting. Before you start, get familiar with the following:

Create the example for the Editor UI

Create a custom Editor window and add all the boxes with a C# script: four boxes with gray backgrounds for comparison purposes; one box with a black background set up using absolute position placement; one box with a purple background set up using relative position placement.

  1. Create a Unity project with any template.

  2. Right-click in the Project window, then select Create > UI Toolkit > Editor Window.

  3. In the C# box of the UI Toolkit Editor Window Creator window, enter PositioningTestWindow.

  4. Clear the UXML and USS checkboxes.

  5. Select Confirm. This creates a C# file called PositioningTestWindow.cs.

  6. Replace PositioningTestWindow.cs with the following content:

    using UnityEditor;
    using UnityEngine;
    using UnityEngine.UIElements;
    
    public class PositioningTestWindow : EditorWindow
    {
        [MenuItem("Window/UI Toolkit/Positioning Test Window")]
        public static void ShowExample()
        {
            var wnd = GetWindow<PositioningTestWindow>();
            wnd.titleContent = new GUIContent("Positioning Test Window");
        }
    
        public void CreateGUI()
        {
            for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++)
            {
                var temp = new VisualElement();
                temp.style.width = 70;
                temp.style.height = 70;
                temp.style.marginBottom = 2;
                temp.style.backgroundColor = Color.gray;
                this.rootVisualElement.Add(temp);
            }
    
            // Relative positioning
            var relative = new Label("Relative\nPos\n25, 0");
            relative.style.width = 70;
            relative.style.height = 70;
            relative.style.left = 25;
            relative.style.marginBottom = 2;
            relative.style.backgroundColor = new Color(0.2165094f, 0, 0.254717f);
            this.rootVisualElement.Add(relative);
    
            for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++)
            {
                var temp = new VisualElement();
                temp.style.width = 70;
                temp.style.height = 70;
                temp.style.marginBottom = 2;
                temp.style.backgroundColor = Color.gray;
                this.rootVisualElement.Add(temp);
            }
    
            // Absolute positioning
            var absolutePositionElement = new Label("Absolute\nPos\n25, 25");
            absolutePositionElement.style.position = Position.Absolute;
            absolutePositionElement.style.top = 25;
            absolutePositionElement.style.left = 25;
            absolutePositionElement.style.width = 70;
            absolutePositionElement.style.height = 70;
            absolutePositionElement.style.backgroundColor = Color.black;
            this.rootVisualElement.Add(absolutePositionElement);
        }
    }
    
  7. To see the example, from the menu, select Window > UI Toolkit > Positioning Test Window.

Create the example for the runtime UI

  1. Create a USS file named PositioningTest.uss with the following content:

    .box {
        height: 70px;
        width: 70px;
        margin-bottom: 2px;
        background-color: gray;
    }
    #relative{
        width: 70px;
        height: 70px;
        background-color: purple;
        left: 25px;
        margin-bottom: 2px;
        position:relative;
    }
    #absolutePositionElement{
        left: 25px;
        top: 25px;
        width: 70px;
        height: 70px;
        background-color: black;
        position: absolute;
    }
    
  2. Create a UXML document named PositioningTest.uxml with the following content:

    <ui:UXML xmlns:ui="UnityEngine.UIElements" xmlns:uie="UnityEditor.UIElements"
    xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" engine="UnityEngine.UIElements"
    editor="UnityEditor.UIElements" noNamespaceSchemaLocation="../UIElementsSchema/UIElements.xsd"
    editor-extension-mode="False">
        <Style src="PositioningTest.uss"/>
        <ui:VisualElement class="box"/>
        <ui:VisualElement  class="box"/>
        <ui:Label text="Relative\nPos\n25, 0" name="relative" />
        <ui:VisualElement  class="box"/>
        <ui:VisualElement  class="box"/>
        <ui:Label text="Absolute\nPos\n25, 25" name="absolutePositionElement" />
    </ui:UXML>
    
  3. Create a C# script named PositioningTestRuntime.cs with the following content:

    using UnityEngine;
    using UnityEngine.UIElements;
    
    public class PostionTestRuntime : MonoBehaviour
    {
        void OnEnable()
        {
            GetComponent<UIDocument>();
        }
       }
    
  4. Right-click in the Hierarchy window, and then select UI Toolkit > UI Document.

  5. In the Inspector window of the UI Document, select UI Document > Source Asset > PositioningTest.

  6. In the Inspector window of the UI Document, select Add Component > Positioning Test Runtime.

  7. Enter Play mode and adjust the resolution as necessary to see the result.

Additional resources

Position element with the layout engine
Set background images