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I was creating a simple scene in Unity3D today where a player would choose their colour by colliding into a wall, which would change the tag of the player to 'RedPlayer', 'BluePlayer', etc; And print on the Debug Log saying 'He's a red boy!', or whatever the player chose. However, everything thing was working fine until I added the last wall in (WhitePlayer), and every wall changed the Player's tag to WhitePlayer, however it still prints the colour of the wall they collide with.

using UnityEngine;
using System.Collections;


public class ColourChoice : MonoBehaviour
{

    void OnTriggerEnter(Collider other)
    {
        if (other.gameObject.tag == "RedCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a Red Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "RedPlayer";

        if (other.gameObject.tag == "YellowCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a Yellow Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "YellowPlayer";

        if (other.gameObject.tag == "BlueCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a Blue Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "BluePlayer";

        if (other.gameObject.tag == "GreyCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a Grey Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "GreyPlayer";

        if (other.gameObject.tag == "GreenCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a Green Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "GreenPlayer";

        if (other.gameObject.tag == "MaroneCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a Marone Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "MaronePlayer";

        if (other.gameObject.tag == "PurpleCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a Purple Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "PurplePlayer";

        if (other.gameObject.tag == "OrangeCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a Orange Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "OrangePlayer";

        if (other.gameObject.tag == "WhiteCollision")
            Debug.Log("He's a White Boy!");
        gameObject.tag = "WhitePlayer";
    }
}

I've included the code here, hoping someone can figure it out. If I could get an explanation on how to fix this, that would be great.

Thanks, Matt

3 Answers 3

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Your code was already bad before you added the WhiteCollision tag check. This is a typical mistake by new programmers.

Without the open and closing braces after each if statement, the Debug.Log will only run if the if statement is true. Other code under the Debug.Log will execute regardless of if the if statement on top of it is true or not.

You must put the if statement code that will execute if something is true in a curly braces {} if you want multiple lines of code to execute.

So

   if (other.gameObject.tag == "RedCollision")
   Debug.Log("He's a Red Boy!");
   gameObject.tag = "RedPlayer";

should be

if (other.gameObject.tag == "RedCollision"){
    Debug.Log("He's a Red Boy!");
    gameObject.tag = "RedPlayer";
}

Do this for each of the if statements in your code.

Tom improve your code, use if (other.gameObject.CompareTag("RedCollision")) to compare tags.

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The problem is that you don't have braces ({}) for your if's. The last line of code that runs in OnTriggerEnter function is gameObject.tag = "WhitePlayer";

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As incredibly clean as it is, you can't write two lines of code in a "short statement" if

Notice you do not have {} enclosing the two lined then? Ya you can't do that. Short hand or short statement is for one line and one line only. Being fancy is fine most of the time but is incredibly wasteful if you get an error and don't enclose it in a "proper" if statement when debugging these errors.

To answer your question, change:

if (other.gameObject.tag == "RedCollision")
  Debug.Log("He's a Red Boy!");
    gameObject.tag = "RedPlayer";

To:

if (other.gameObject.tag == "RedCollision") {
    Debug.Log("He's a Red Boy!");
    gameObject.tag = "RedPlayer";
}

And ALWAYS properly indent your stuff if you ever mess with short hand.

Do a test on this:

if( X != 1 )
    Debug.Log( "1" );
    if( X == 2 )
        Debug.Log( "2" );
    else
        Debug.Log( "3" );

And:

if( X != 1 )
    Debug.Log( "1" );
    if( X == 2 )
        Debug.Log( "2" );
   else
        Debug.Log( "3" );

Notice the one space difference

Thanks to this Python-ian indent type, if your X is equal to two, the top example will log "1" then "2" whereas the bottom will log "3"

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