Event functions are a set of built-in events that your MonoBehaviour scriptsA piece of code that allows you to create your own Components, trigger game events, modify Component properties over time and respond to user input in any way you like. More info
See in Glossary can optionally subscribe to by implementing the appropriate methods, often referred to as callbacks. The callbacks correspond to events in core Unity subsystems like physics, rendering, and user input, or to stages of the script’s own lifecycle such as its creation, activation, frame-dependent and frame-independent updates, and destruction. When the event occurs, Unity invokes the associated callback on your script, giving you the opportunity to implement logic in response to the event.
To the extent that Unity raises these events and calls the associated MonoBehaviour callbacks in a predetermined order, the order is documented here. It’s important to understand the execution order so you don’t try to use one callback to do work which depends on another callback that hasn’t been invoked yet. However, bear in mind that some callbacks are for events, such as those triggered by user inputs, which can occur at any time while your game is running. You should consult this page in combination with the MonoBehaviour script reference (where the event callbacks are listed under Messages) for a complete understanding of each event’s meaning and limitations.
The diagram below summarizes how Unity orders and repeats event functions over a script’s lifetime.
For more information about the various event functions, see the following sections:
The scope of the flowchart below is limited to the built-in event functions that you can subscribe to on any MonoBehaviour script by implementing the appropriate callbacks documented under Messages in the MonoBehaviour scripting reference. Some additional internal methods local to the subsystems that raise the events are also shown for context.
In addition to these built-in event functions there are a number of other events you can potentially subscribe to in your scripts. Several major classes such as Application, SceneManager, and CameraA component which creates an image of a particular viewpoint in your scene. The output is either drawn to the screen or captured as a texture. More info
See in Glossary offer delegates that you can register your own callback methods with. Method attributes like RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethodAttribute can also be used to execute methods at certain stages of the sceneA Scene contains the environments and menus of your game. Think of each unique Scene file as a unique level. In each Scene, you place your environments, obstacles, and decorations, essentially designing and building your game in pieces. More info
See in Glossary. Refer to the scripting reference for the component or subsystem you’re interested in to see what event callbacks you can subscribe to and details of their execution order.
Note: Some browsers do not support SVG image files. If the image above does not display properly (for example, if you cannot see any text), please try another browser, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.
In general, you should not rely on the order in which the same event function is invoked for different GameObjectsThe fundamental object in Unity scenes, which can represent characters, props, scenery, cameras, waypoints, and more. A GameObject’s functionality is defined by the Components attached to it. More info
See in Glossary — except when the order is explicitly documented or settable. If you need a more fine-grained control of the player loop, you can use the PlayerLoop API.
You cannot specify the order in which an event function is called for different instances of the same MonoBehaviour subclass. For example, the Update
function of one MonoBehaviour might be called before or after the Update
function for the same MonoBehaviour on another GameObject — including its own parent or child GameObjects.
You can specify that the event functions of one MonoBehaviour subclass should be invoked before those of a different subclass using the Script Execution Order panel of the Project SettingsA broad collection of settings which allow you to configure how Physics, Audio, Networking, Graphics, Input and many other areas of your project behave. More info
See in Glossary window. For example, if you had two scripts, EngineBehaviour and SteeringBehaviour, you could set the Script Execution Order such that EngineBehaviours always update before SteeringBehaviours. If loading multiple scenes additively, the configured script execution order is applied in full one scene at a time, rather than partially across scenes, so EngineBehaviours and SteeringBehaviours would both update on one scene before they updated on the next one.
These functions get called when a scene starts (once for each object in the scene).
Awake
: First lifecycle function called when a new instance of an object is created. Always called before any Start
functions. If a GameObject is inactive during start up, Awake
is not called until it is made active.OnEnable
: Called when the object becomes enabled and active, always after Awake
(on the same object) and before any Start
.For objects that are part of a scene asset, Awake
and OnEnable
functions for all scripts are called before Start
and subsequent functions are called for any of them. However, this can’t be enforced when you instantiate an object at runtime.
Awake
is only guaranteed to be called before OnEnable
in the scope of each individual object. Across multiple objects the order is not deterministic and you can’t rely on one object’s Awake
being called before another object’s OnEnable
. Any work that depends on Awake
having been called for all objects in the scene should be done in Start
.
Not shown in the diagram above are the SceneManager.sceneLoaded and SceneManager.sceneUnloaded events which allow you to receive callbacks when a scene has loaded and unloaded respectively. Refer to the relevant scripting reference pages for details and example usage. You can expect to receive the sceneLoaded
notification after OnEnable
but before Start
for all objects in the scene. Refer to Details of disabling Domain and Scene reload for a diagram that includes scene load as part of the execution flow.
You can also use the RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethodAttribute and its types BeforeSceneLoad and AfterSceneLoad to make your methods run before or after scene load respectively. Refer to the RuntimeInitializeOnLoadMethodAttribute scripting reference main page for execution order information for methods marked with these types.
Reset
: called to initialize the script’s properties when it is first attached to an object and also when the Reset command is used.OnValidate
: called whenever the script’s properties are set, including when an object is deserialized, which can occur at various times, such as when you open a scene in the Editor and after a domain reload.Start
: called before the first frame update only if the script instance is enabled.For objects that are part of a scene asset, the Start
function is called on all scripts before Update
is called for any of them. However, this cannot be enforced when you instantiate an object during gameplay. For example, if you instantiate an object from another object’s Update
function, the instantiated object’s Start
can’t be called until Update
runs for the first time on the original object.
OnApplicationPause
: This is called at the end of the frame where the pause is detected, effectively between the normal frame updates. One extra frame will be issued after OnApplicationPause
is called to allow the game to show graphics that indicate the paused state.When you’re keeping track of game logic and interactions, animations, camera positions, etc., there are a few different events you can use. The common pattern is to perform most tasks inside the Update
function, but there are also other functions you can use.
FixedUpdate
happens at fixed intervals of in-game time rather than per frame. Since these updates are fixed and frame rate is variable, there may be no fixed update during a frame when frame rate is high, or multiple fixed updates per frame when frame rate is low. All physics calculations and updates occur immediately after FixedUpdate
and because it’s frame-rate independent you don’t need to multiply values by Time.deltaTime when calculating movement in a FixedUpdate
. The interval at which fixed updates happen is defined by Time.fixedDeltaTime, which can be set directly in scripts or via the Fixed TimestepA customizable frame-rate-independent interval that dictates when physics calculations and FixedUpdate() events are performed. More info
See in Glossary property in the Editor’s Time settings. For more information, including the time calculations used to determine whether to perform an Update
or a FixedUpdate
, refer to Time.
Update
is called once per frame and is the main function for frame updates.
LateUpdate
is called once per frame, after Update
has finished. Any calculations performed in Update
will have completed when LateUpdate
begins. A common use for LateUpdate
would be a following third-person camera. If you make your character move and turn inside Update
, you can perform all camera movement and rotation calculations in LateUpdate
. This will ensure that the character has moved completely before the camera tracks its position.
The following Animation loop callbacks shown in the flowchart above are called on scripts that derive from MonoBehaviour:
Additional animation-related event functions are called on scripts that derive from StateMachineBehaviour:
For the meaning and limitations of these callbacks, refer to the relevant scripting reference pages.
Other animation functions shown in the flowchart are internal to the animation system and are provided for context. These functions have associated Profiler markers so you can use the ProfilerA window that helps you to optimize your game. It shows how much time is spent in the various areas of your game. For example, it can report the percentage of time spent rendering, animating, or in your game logic. More info
See in Glossary to see when in the frame Unity calls them. Knowing when Unity calls these functions can help you understand exactly when the Event functions you do call are executed. For a full execution order of animation functions and profiler markers, refer to Profiler markersPlaced in code to describe a CPU or GPU event that is then displayed in the Unity Profiler window. Added to Unity code by default, or you can use ProfilerMarker API to add your own custom markers. More info
See in Glossary.
This execution order applies for the Built-in Render Pipeline only. For details of execution order in render pipelinesA series of operations that take the contents of a Scene, and displays them on a screen. Unity lets you choose from pre-built render pipelines, or write your own. More info
See in Glossary based on the Scriptable Render Pipeline, refer to the relevant sections of the documentation for the Universal Render Pipeline or the High Definition Render Pipeline. If you want to do work immediately prior to rendering, refer to Application.onBeforeRender.
OnPreCull
: Called before the camera culls the scene. Culling determines which objects are visible to the camera. OnPreCull
is called just before culling takes place.OnBecameVisible
/OnBecameInvisible
: Called when an object becomes visible/invisible to any camera. OnBecameInvisible
is not shown in the flow chart above since an object may become invisible at any time.OnWillRenderObject
: Called once for each camera if the object is visible.OnPreRender
: Called before the camera starts rendering the scene.OnRenderObject
: Called after all regular scene rendering is done. You can use GL class or Graphics.DrawMeshNow to draw custom geometry at this point.OnPostRender
: Called after a camera finishes rendering the scene.OnRenderImage
: Called after scene rendering is complete to allow post-processingA process that improves product visuals by applying filters and effects before the image appears on screen. You can use post-processing effects to simulate physical camera and film properties, for example Bloom and Depth of Field. More info post processing, postprocessing, postprocessOnGUI
: Called multiple times per frame in response to GUI events. The Layout and Repaint events are processed first, followed by a Layout and keyboard/mouse event for each input event.OnDrawGizmos
Used for drawing GizmosA graphic overlay associated with a GameObject in a Scene, and displayed in the Scene View. Built-in scene tools such as the move tool are Gizmos, and you can create custom Gizmos using textures or scripting. Some Gizmos are only drawn when the GameObject is selected, while other Gizmos are drawn by the Editor regardless of which GameObjects are selected. More info
Note: OnPreCull, OnPreRender, OnPostRender, and OnRenderImage are built-in Unity event functions that are called on MonoBehaviour scripts but only if those scripts are attached to the same object as an enabled Camera component. If you want to receive the equivalent callbacks for OnPreCull
, OnPreRender
, and OnPostRender
on a MonoBehaviour attached to a different object, you must use the equivalent delegates (note the lowercase on
in the names) Camera.onPreCull, Camera.onPreRender, and Camera.onPostRender as shown in the code examples in the relevant pages of the scripting reference.
Normal coroutine updates are run after the Update
function returns. A coroutine is a function that can suspend its execution (yield
) until the given YieldInstruction finishes.
Different uses of coroutines:
yield
The coroutine will continue after all Update
functions have been called on the next frame.yield WaitForSeconds
Continue after a specified time delay, after all Update
functions have been called for the frame.yield WaitForFixedUpdate
Continue after all FixedUpdate
has been called on all scripts. If the coroutine yielded before FixedUpdate
, then it resumes after FixedUpdate
in the current frame.yield WWW
Continue after a WWW download has completed.yield StartCoroutine
Chains the coroutine so that if a theoretical coroutine coroutineA
starts another coroutineB
with yield StartCoroutine(coroutineB());
then coroutineA
pauses and waits for coroutineB
to finish before continuing. For an example, refer to MonoBehaviour.StartCoroutine.OnDestroy
: This function is called after all frame updates for the last frame of the object’s existence (the object might be destroyed in response to Object.Destroy or at the closure of a scene).These functions get called on all the active objects in your scene:
OnApplicationQuit
: This function is called on all game objects before the application is quit. In the editor it is called when the user stops playmode.OnDisable
: This function is called when the behaviour becomes disabled or inactive.