Hi,
The perfect lookAt takes two arguments, lookAt position vector and the Up Vector. I was going through different forums for a smooth (over a time) look up using Quaternions.Slerp and have found this
But it does not consider the Up Vector. I was wondering what would be the accurate function for such a LookAt which can animate properly along with Up Vector.
Can anybody give me an idea ? Do i need to derive it mathematically or does Unity provides an in built solution ?
I was voted down on that fine heres the following script I use.
/*
This camera smoothes out rotation around the y-axis and height.
Horizontal Distance to the target is always fixed.
There are many different ways to smooth the rotation but doing it this way gives you a lot of control over how the camera behaves.
For every of those smoothed values we calculate the wanted value and the current value.
Then we smooth it using the Lerp function.
Then we apply the smoothed values to the transform’s position.
*/
// The target we are following
var target : Transform;
// The distance in the x-z plane to the target
var distance = 10.0;
// the height we want the camera to be above the target
var height = 5.0;
// How much we
var heightDamping = 2.0;
var rotationDamping = 3.0;
// Place the script in the Camera-Control group in the component menu @script AddComponentMenu(“Camera-Control/Smooth Follow”)
function LateUpdate () {
// Early out if we don’t have a target
if (!target)
return;
// Calculate the current rotation angles
wantedRotationAngle = target.eulerAngles.y;
wantedHeight = target.position.y + height;
currentRotationAngle = transform.eulerAngles.y;
currentHeight = transform.position.y;
// Damp the rotation around the y-axis
currentRotationAngle = Mathf.LerpAngle (currentRotationAngle, wantedRotationAngle, rotationDamping * Time.deltaTime);
// Damp the height
currentHeight = Mathf.Lerp (currentHeight, wantedHeight, heightDamping * Time.deltaTime);
// Convert the angle into a rotation
currentRotation = Quaternion.Euler (0, currentRotationAngle, 0);
// Set the position of the camera on the x-z plane to:
// distance meters behind the target
transform.position = target.position;
transform.position -= currentRotation * Vector3.forward * distance;
// Set the height of the camera
transform.position.y = currentHeight;
// Always look at the target
transform.LookAt (target);
I guess, the only good solution i got until now is to manipulate euler angles for lookat rotation. (x, y in camera orbit script), if any one knows any better one please do let me know.