PropertyDrawer

class in UnityEditor

/

Inherits from:GUIDrawer

Switch to Manual

Description

Base class to derive custom property drawers from. Use this to create custom drawers for your own Serializable classes or for script variables with custom PropertyAttributes.

PropertyDrawers have two uses:
- Customize the GUI of every instance of a Serializable class.
- Customize the GUI of script members with custom PropertyAttributes.

If you have a custom Serializable class, you can use a PropertyDrawer to control how it looks in the Inspector. Consider the Serializable class Ingredient in the script below:

using System;
using UnityEngine;

public enum IngredientUnit { Spoon, Cup, Bowl, Piece }

// Custom serializable class [Serializable] public class Ingredient { public string name; public int amount = 1; public IngredientUnit unit; }

public class Recipe : MonoBehaviour { public Ingredient potionResult; public Ingredient[] potionIngredients; }

Using a custom PropertyDrawer, every appearance of the Ingredient class in the Inspector can be changed.

You can attach the PropertyDrawer to a Serializable class by using the CustomPropertyDrawer attribute and pass in the type of the Serializable class that it's a drawer for.

You can either use UIElements to build your custom PropertyDrawer or you can use IMGUI. To create a custom PropertyDrawer using UIElements, you have to override the PropertyDrawer.CreatePropertyGUI on the PropertyDrawer class. To create a custom PropertyDrawer using IMGUI, you have to override the PropertyDrawer.OnGUI on the PropertyDrawer class.

If the PropertyDrawer is used inside a UIElements-based inspector or EditorWindow, the UIElements implementation will be used if PropertyDrawer.CreatePropertyGUI is overwritten with a fallback on any IMGUI implementation. If the PropertyDrawer is used inside an IMGUI-based inspector or EditorWindow, only the IMGUI implementation will display. You cannot have UIElements running inside IMGUI.

Here's an example of a custom PropertyDrawer written using UIElements:

using UnityEditor;
using UnityEditor.UIElements;
using UnityEngine.UIElements;

// IngredientDrawerUIE [CustomPropertyDrawer(typeof(Ingredient))] public class IngredientDrawerUIE : PropertyDrawer { public override VisualElement CreatePropertyGUI(SerializedProperty property) { // Create property container element. var container = new VisualElement();

// Create property fields. var amountField = new PropertyField(property.FindPropertyRelative("amount")); var unitField = new PropertyField(property.FindPropertyRelative("unit")); var nameField = new PropertyField(property.FindPropertyRelative("name"), "Fancy Name");

// Add fields to the container. container.Add(amountField); container.Add(unitField); container.Add(nameField);

return container; } }

Here's an example of custom PropertyDrawer written using IMGUI. Compare the look of the Ingredient properties in the Inspector without and with a custom PropertyDrawer:


Class in the Inspector without (left) and with (right) custom PropertyDrawer.

using UnityEditor;
using UnityEngine;

// IngredientDrawer [CustomPropertyDrawer(typeof(Ingredient))] public class IngredientDrawer : PropertyDrawer { // Draw the property inside the given rect public override void OnGUI(Rect position, SerializedProperty property, GUIContent label) { // Using BeginProperty / EndProperty on the parent property means that // prefab override logic works on the entire property. EditorGUI.BeginProperty(position, label, property);

// Draw label position = EditorGUI.PrefixLabel(position, GUIUtility.GetControlID(FocusType.Passive), label);

// Don't make child fields be indented var indent = EditorGUI.indentLevel; EditorGUI.indentLevel = 0;

// Calculate rects var amountRect = new Rect(position.x, position.y, 30, position.height); var unitRect = new Rect(position.x + 35, position.y, 50, position.height); var nameRect = new Rect(position.x + 90, position.y, position.width - 90, position.height);

// Draw fields - passs GUIContent.none to each so they are drawn without labels EditorGUI.PropertyField(amountRect, property.FindPropertyRelative("amount"), GUIContent.none); EditorGUI.PropertyField(unitRect, property.FindPropertyRelative("unit"), GUIContent.none); EditorGUI.PropertyField(nameRect, property.FindPropertyRelative("name"), GUIContent.none);

// Set indent back to what it was EditorGUI.indentLevel = indent;

EditorGUI.EndProperty(); } }

The other use of PropertyDrawer is to alter the appearance of members in a script that have custom PropertyAttributes. Say you want to limit floats or integers in your script to a certain range and show them as sliders in the Inspector. Using the built-in PropertyAttribute called RangeAttribute you can do just that:

using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;

public class ExampleClass : MonoBehaviour { // Show this float in the Inspector as a slider between 0 and 10 [Range(0.0F, 10.0F)] public float myFloat = 0.0F; }

You can make your own PropertyAttribute as well. We'll use the code for the RangeAttribute as an example. The attribute must extend the PropertyAttribute class. If you want, your property can take parameters and store them as public member variables.

// This is not an editor script. The property attribute class should be placed in a regular script file.
using UnityEngine;

public class RangeAttribute : PropertyAttribute { public float min; public float max;

public RangeAttribute(float min, float max) { this.min = min; this.max = max; } }

Now that you have the attribute, you need to make a PropertyDrawer that draws properties that have that attribute. The drawer must extend the PropertyDrawer class, and it must have a CustomPropertyDrawer attribute to tell it which attribute it's a drawer for. Here's an example using IMGUI:

// The property drawer class should be placed in an editor script, inside a folder called Editor.

// Tell the RangeDrawer that it is a drawer for properties with the RangeAttribute. using UnityEngine; using UnityEditor;

[CustomPropertyDrawer(typeof(RangeAttribute))] public class RangeDrawer : PropertyDrawer { // Draw the property inside the given rect public override void OnGUI(Rect position, SerializedProperty property, GUIContent label) { // First get the attribute since it contains the range for the slider RangeAttribute range = attribute as RangeAttribute;

// Now draw the property as a Slider or an IntSlider based on whether it's a float or integer. if (property.propertyType == SerializedPropertyType.Float) EditorGUI.Slider(position, property, range.min, range.max, label); else if (property.propertyType == SerializedPropertyType.Integer) EditorGUI.IntSlider(position, property, Convert.ToInt32(range.min), Convert.ToInt32(range.max), label); else EditorGUI.LabelField(position, label.text, "Use Range with float or int."); } }

Note that for performance reasons, EditorGUILayout functions are not usable with PropertyDrawers.

See Also: PropertyAttribute class, CustomPropertyDrawer class.

Variables

attributeThe PropertyAttribute for the property. Not applicable for custom class drawers. (Read Only)
fieldInfoThe reflection FieldInfo for the member this property represents. (Read Only)

Public Functions

CanCacheInspectorGUIOverride this method to determine whether the inspector GUI for your property can be cached.
CreatePropertyGUIOverride this method to make your own UIElements based GUI for the property.
GetPropertyHeightOverride this method to specify how tall the GUI for this field is in pixels.
OnGUIOverride this method to make your own IMGUI based GUI for the property.

Inherited members