public static GameObject Find (string name);

설명

Finds a GameObject by name and returns it.

This function only returns active GameObjects. If no GameObject with name can be found, null is returned. If name contains a '/' character, it traverses the hierarchy like a path name.

For performance reasons, it is recommended to not use this function every frame. Instead, cache the result in a member variable at startup. or use GameObject.FindWithTag.

Note: If you wish to find a child GameObject, it is often easier to use Transform.Find.

Note: If the game is running with multiple scenes then Find will search in all of them.

using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;

// This returns the GameObject named Hand in one of the Scenes.

public class ExampleClass : MonoBehaviour { public GameObject hand;

void Example() { // This returns the GameObject named Hand. hand = GameObject.Find("Hand");

// This returns the GameObject named Hand. // Hand must not have a parent in the Hierarchy view. hand = GameObject.Find("/Hand");

// This returns the GameObject named Hand, // which is a child of Arm > Monster. // Monster must not have a parent in the Hierarchy view. hand = GameObject.Find("/Monster/Arm/Hand");

// This returns the GameObject named Hand, // which is a child of Arm > Monster. hand = GameObject.Find("Monster/Arm/Hand"); } }

GameObject.Find is useful for automatically connecting references to other objects at load time; for example, inside MonoBehaviour.Awake or MonoBehaviour.Start.

For performance reasons, it is recommended to not use this function every frame.

A common pattern is to assign a GameObject to a variable inside MonoBehaviour.Start, and use the variable in MonoBehaviour.Update.

using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;

// Find the GameObject named Hand and rotate it every frame

public class ExampleClass : MonoBehaviour { private GameObject hand;

void Start() { hand = GameObject.Find("/Monster/Arm/Hand"); }

void Update() { hand.transform.Rotate(0, 100 * Time.deltaTime, 0); } }