I have looked everywhere including the Unity documentation but cannot seem to find any good examples of how to use Unity's Vector2.Reflect() function. I am trying to use this to control the direction of the ball (in a 2D Breakout game) when it hits a wall. It takes 2 arguments (inDirection, inNormal) but I cannot seem to figure out how to use this. Any help would be appreciated.
2 Answers
Vector2 Reflect(Vector2 inDirection, Vector2 inNormal):
inDirection: black arrow
inNormal: red arrow
return output: green arrow
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Isn't this more of a bounce (of invisible wall defined by normal) than a reflect (around the norm vector)? A true vector reflection would be like in the image but with black arrow reversed– SpiderSep 3, 2021 at 1:16
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@Spider In the diagram, you want to reflect the vector off the blue vertical line, as if the blue line was a mirror. The diagram is correct. Nov 24, 2021 at 10:01
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@shieldgenerator7, I see there is always this perspective thought shift, when I look at the normal as the actual mirror– SpiderNov 26, 2021 at 23:56
The inDirection should be the velocity of your ball and the inNormal should be the unit vector that is perpendicular to your wall.
Try putting this in your ball object:
void OnCollisionEnter(Collision collision)
{
Vector2D inDirection = GetComponent<RigidBody2D>().velocity;
Vector2D inNormal = collision.contacts[0].normal;
Vector2D newVelocity = Vector2D.Reflect(inDirection, inNormal);
}
NOTE: I cannot currently test that code, so it may need tweaking in terms of the names of things.
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Looks like inNormal must really be a unit vector, or your result will be messed up, as Unity would apply a raw formula without normalizing it for performance.– hsandtFeb 28, 2019 at 0:12
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@hsandt That's what I was wondering too. So far my tests have shown that the
ContactPoint2D.normalis always a unit vector Nov 24, 2021 at 10:08
