Version: 2021.1
Using the Mesh Class
Materials

Example - Creating a quad

To represent flat surfaces, Unity includes the Plane and Quad primitive GameObjects that you can instantiate in your Scenes. However, it is useful to understand how to use a script to construct a quadrilateral mesh yourself. This is essential for procedural mesh generation.

Note: Unity processes and displays geometry in triangles, and not quads. This means that the Quad primitive consists of two triangles.

Vertex array

The first thing you need to do is set up the array of vertices that your shape uses.

This example assumes that the quad lies on the x-axis and y-axis, and that your script contains the variables width and height.

Vector3[] vertices = new Vector3[4]
{
    new Vector3(0, 0, 0),
    new Vector3(width, 0, 0),
    new Vector3(0, height, 0),
    new Vector3(width, height, 0)
};
mesh.vertices = vertices;

This example supplies the vertices in the following order: Bottom-left Bottom-right Top-left Top-right

Due to the way that Unity retrieves Mesh data properties, it is much more efficient to set up data in your own array and then assign the array to a property (for example, to Mesh.vertices or Mesh.normals), rather than access the property array via individual elements.

Triangles

Next, you need to set up the triangles. A quad consists of two triangles, each made up of three points in the vertex array you created earlier. To specify the points, you define each triangle as three indices of the the vertex array. For example, the lower left triangle for this quad uses index 0, 2, and 1 which corresponds to coordinates (0, 0, 0), (0, height, 0), and (width, 0, 0) from the vertex array. The ordering is important because you must order the corners clockwise. The upper right triangle uses index 2, 3, and 1.

int[] tris = new int[6]
{
    // lower left triangle
    0, 2, 1,
    // upper right triangle
    2, 3, 1
};
mesh.triangles = tris;

Normals

A Mesh with vertices and triangles is visible in the Scene, but Unity does not shade it correctly because it has no normals yet. The normals for this example are simple because they are all identical. Every normal points in the negative z-axis direction in the quad’s local space. When you add the normals, Unity correctly shades the quad, but you need a Light in the Scene to see the effect.

Vector3[] normals = new Vector3[4]
{
    -Vector3.forward,
    -Vector3.forward,
    -Vector3.forward,
    -Vector3.forward
};
mesh.normals = normals;

If you do not want to define the normals yourself, you can use Mesh.RecalculateNormals().

Texture coordinates

Finally, to display Textures on the Mesh’s Material correctly, add texture coordinates to the Mesh. Texture coordinates are between 0 and 1. Each vertex in the Mesh has a texture coordinate which specifies where on the Material’s Texture to sample from. To show the whole Texture across the quad, the texture coordinate values on each vertex should all be 0 or 1 so that each corner of the quad corresponds to a corner of the Texture.

Vector2[] uv = new Vector2[4]
{
      new Vector2(0, 0),
      new Vector2(1, 0),
      new Vector2(0, 1),
      new Vector2(1, 1)
};
mesh.uv = uv;

Final script

The following script combines everything above to create a quad in your Scene. To use it: Create a new C# script (menu: Assets > Create > C# Script) and name it QuadCreator. Open the QuadCreator script, copy the example code into it, and save the script. Back in the Editor, create a new GameObject in your Scene (menu: GameObject > Create Empty). In the Inspector, select Add Component > Scripts > Quad Creator. Position the GameObject wherever you want in the Scene. Enter Play Mode. If you can not see the quad in the Scene or Game view, make sure you are viewing it from the correct side; Unity does not render the back face of this Mesh.

using UnityEngine;

public class QuadCreator : MonoBehaviour
{
    public float width = 1;
    public float height = 1;

    public void Start()
    {
        MeshRenderer meshRenderer = gameObject.AddComponent<MeshRenderer>();
        meshRenderer.sharedMaterial = new Material(Shader.Find("Standard"));

        MeshFilter meshFilter = gameObject.AddComponent<MeshFilter>();

        Mesh mesh = new Mesh();

        Vector3[] vertices = new Vector3[4]
        {
            new Vector3(0, 0, 0),
            new Vector3(width, 0, 0),
            new Vector3(0, height, 0),
            new Vector3(width, height, 0)
        };
        mesh.vertices = vertices;

        int[] tris = new int[6]
        {
            // lower left triangle
            0, 2, 1,
            // upper right triangle
            2, 3, 1
        };
        mesh.triangles = tris;

        Vector3[] normals = new Vector3[4]
        {
            -Vector3.forward,
            -Vector3.forward,
            -Vector3.forward,
            -Vector3.forward
        };
        mesh.normals = normals;

        Vector2[] uv = new Vector2[4]
        {
            new Vector2(0, 0),
            new Vector2(1, 0),
            new Vector2(0, 1),
            new Vector2(1, 1)
        };
        mesh.uv = uv;

        meshFilter.mesh = mesh;
    }
}

Note: This example code is in the Start function, which means that it executes once when you enter Play Mode, and the Mesh does not change throughout the application. However, you can add code in the Update function to make the Mesh change each frame. Be aware that this greatly increases the resource intensity of the Mesh generation.

Using the Mesh Class
Materials