Serialization is the automatic process of transforming data structures or object states into a format that Unity can store and reconstruct later. (See the documentation on Script Serialization for further information.)
In certain circumstances, Script serialization can cause errors. Fixes to some of these are listed below.
Calling Scripting API such as GameObject.Find inside a MonoBehaviour constructor or field initializer triggers the error: “Find is not allowed to be called from a MonoBehaviour constructor (or instance field initializer), call in in Awake or Start instead.”
Fix this by making the call to the Scripting API in MonoBehaviour.Start instead of in the constructor.
Calling Scripting API such as GameObject.Find from within the constructor of a class marked with System.Serializable
triggers the error: “Find is not allowed to be called during serialization, call it from Awake or Start instead.”
To fix this, edit your code so that it makes no Scripting API calls in any constructors for any serialized objects.
The majority of the Scripting API is affected by the restrictions listed above. Only select parts of the Unity scripting API are exempt and may be called from anywhere. These are:
Mathf functions
Simple self-contained structs; for example math structs like Vector3 and QuaternionUnity’s standard way of representing rotations as data. When writing code that deals with rotations, you should usually use the Quaternion class and its methods. More info
See in Glossary
To reduce the risk of errors during serialization, only call API methods that are self-contained and do not need to get or set data in Unity itself. Only call these if there is no alternative.
• 2017–05–15 Page published with editorial review
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