The following tables describes the Panel Settings asset properties:
Property | Description | |
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Theme Style Sheet | Apply a style sheet (.uss file) by default to every UIDocument that the panel renders. |
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Text Settings | Set the Panel Text Settings asset for this panel. If this asset isn’t set, UI(User Interface) Allows a user to interact with your application. Unity currently supports three UI systems. More info See in Glossary Toolkit automatically creates one with the default settings. |
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Target Texture | Render the panel with a Render TextureA special type of Texture that is created and updated at runtime. To use them, first create a new Render Texture and designate one of your Cameras to render into it. Then you can use the Render Texture in a Material just like a regular Texture. More info See in Glossary. For a 3D game, display UI on 3D geometry in the scene. |
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Sort Order | Set the order that the UI System draws panels in if the SceneA Scene contains the environments and menus of your game. Think of each unique Scene file as a unique level. In each Scene, you place your environments, obstacles, and decorations, essentially designing and building your game in pieces. More info See in Glossary uses more than one panel. Panels with higher Sort Order values are drawn on top of panels with lower values. |
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Scale Mode | Set how the panel’s UI scales when the screen size changes. | |
Scale Mode Parameters | Display different properties depending on the Scale Mode setting. | |
Dynamic Atlas Settings | Specify the settings that the dynamic atlas system uses. | |
Min Atlas Size | Set the minimum size (width/height) of the atlas texture, in pixelsThe smallest unit in a computer image. Pixel size depends on your screen resolution. Pixel lighting is calculated at every screen pixel. More info See in Glossary. |
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Max Atlas Size | Set the maximum size (width/height) of the atlas texture, in pixels. | |
Max Sub Texture Size | Set the maximum size (width/height) of a texture that can be added to the atlas. | |
Active Filters | Set the filters that the dynamic atlas system uses to exclude textures from the texture atlas. |
The following table describes the parameters for each scale mode:
Scale Mode | Scale Mode Parameters | Description |
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Constant Pixel Size | Set elements to stay the same size, in pixels, regardless of screen size. | |
Scale | Multiply element sizes by this value. Must be greater than 0. | |
Constant Physical Size | Set elements stay the same physical size regardless of screen size and resolution. | |
Reference DPI | Set the Reference DPI value to the screen density that your UI was designed for. When the system renders your UI, it tries to find the actual DPI value of the screen, and compares it to the Reference DPI. If they’re different, the system scales the UI accordingly. | |
Fallback DPI | Use this value if the UI system can’t determine the screen DPI. | |
Scale with Screen Size | Set elements to grow or shrink depending on the screen size. | |
Screen Match Mode | Set how to scale elements when the screen resolution is different from the Reference Resolution:
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Reference Resolution | Set the resolution that this panel’s UI is designed for. If the screen resolution is larger than the reference resolution, the UI scales up. If it’s smaller, the UI scales down. How the UI scales depends on the Screen Match Mode. | |
Screen Match Mode Parameters | When Screen Match Mode is set to Match Width or Height, the Match value controls whether the UI system scales the UI to match the screen width, the screen height, or a mix of the two. For example, if the value is 0 , it matches the width; if the value is 1 , it matches the height; if the value is 0.4 , it linearly interpolates between width and height by 40% . |
You can apply more than one filter at a time. The following table describes each active filter.
Filter | Description |
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Nothing | Disable all the filters. |
Everything | Apply all the filters. |
Readability | Exclude textures that Texture2D.isReadable is set to true . Unity can’t automatically update the dynamic atlas when you add a texture through APIs like Texture2D.SetPixels . You can use RuntimePanelUtils.SetTextureDirty to force the atlas to update its content for a given texture. |
Size | Exclude textures that are larger than the Max Sub Texture Size setting. Large textures can saturate the atlas quickly. If you don’t want to add large textures to the atlas, select this filter and adjust Max Sub Texture Size to fit your needs. By default, textures larger than 64x64 aren’t allowed into the atlas. |
Format | Store sRGB-encoded data with 8-bits per channel precision, and excludes sub-textures that would lose precision or be truncated when added to the atlas, such as an R16G16B16A16_FLOAT texture. |
Color Space | Exclude R8G8B8A8_UNORM content when the project is in a linear color space. In a linear color space, the format of the RenderTexture of the dynamic atlas is R8G8B8A8_SRGB. The data stored in the RenderTexture is sRGB-encoded. When read from, it’s linearized, and when written to, it’s encoded to sRGB. Because of the limited precision of the format, R8G8B8A8_UNORM content stored in the atlas could cause banding to occur. |
Filter Mode | Exclude textures for which the sub-texture filter mode, such as Point or Bilinear, doesn’t match the atlas filter mode. This prevents the mismatch between the sub-texture filter mode and the atlas filter mode. The mismatch could cause unexpected blurriness or blockiness. |