colors | The array of pixel colours to use. This is a 2D image flattened to a 1D array. |
miplevel | The mipmap level to write colors to. The range is 0 through the texture's Texture.mipmapCount. The default value is 0 . |
Sets the pixel colors of an entire mipmap level.
This method sets pixel data for the texture in CPU memory. Texture.isReadable must be true
, and you must call Apply after SetPixels
to upload the changed pixels to the GPU.
Apply is an expensive operation because it copies all the pixels in the texture even if you've only changed some of the pixels, so change as many pixels as possible before you call it.colors
must contain the pixels row by row, starting at the bottom left of the texture. The size of the array must be the width × height of the mipmap level.
A single call to SetPixels
is usually faster than multiple calls to SetPixel, especially for large textures.SetPixels
might be slower than some other texture methods because it converts the Color struct into the format the texture uses. To set pixel data more quickly, use SetPixelData instead.
You can use SetPixels
with the following texture formats:
Alpha8
ARGB32
ARGB4444
BGRA32
R16
R16_SIGNED
R8
R8_SIGNED
RFloat
RG16
RG16_SIGNED
RG32
RG32_SIGNED
RGB24
RGB24_SIGNED
RGB48
RGB48_SIGNED
RGB565
RGB9e5Float
RGBA32
RGBA32_SIGNED
RGBA4444
RGBA64
RGBA64_SIGNED
RGBAFloat
RGBAHalf
RGFloat
RGHalf
RHalf
For all other formats, SetPixels
fails. Unity throws an exception when SetPixels
fails.
See Also: GetPixels, SetPixels32, SetPixelData, Apply, GetRawTextureData, LoadRawTextureData, mipmapCount.
using UnityEngine; using System.Collections;
public class ExampleClass : MonoBehaviour { void Start() { Renderer rend = GetComponent<Renderer>();
// Duplicate the original texture and assign to the material Texture2D texture = Instantiate(rend.material.mainTexture) as Texture2D; rend.material.mainTexture = texture;
// Create the colors to use Color[] colors = new Color[3]; colors[0] = Color.red; colors[1] = Color.green; colors[2] = Color.blue; int mipCount = Mathf.Min(3, texture.mipmapCount);
// For each mipmap level, use GetPixels to fetch an array of pixel data, and use SetPixels to fill the mipmap level with one color. for (int mip = 0; mip < mipCount; ++mip) { Color[] cols = texture.GetPixels(mip); for (int i = 0; i < cols.Length; ++i) { cols[i] = Color.Lerp(cols[i], colors[mip], 0.33f); } texture.SetPixels(cols, mip); } // Copy the changes to the GPU. and don't recalculate mipmap levels. texture.Apply(false); } }
x | The x coordinate to place the block of pixels at. The range is 0 through (texture width - 1). |
y | The y coordinate to place the block of pixels at. The range is 0 through (texture height - 1). |
blockWidth | The width of the block of pixels to set. |
blockHeight | The height of the block of pixels to set. |
colors | The array of pixel colours to use. This is a 2D image flattened to a 1D array. Must be blockWidth x blockHeight in length. |
miplevel | The mipmap level to write colors to. The range is 0 through the texture's Texture.mipmapCount. The default value is 0 . |
Sets the pixel colors of part of a mipmap level.
This version of SetPixels
sets part of a mipmap level instead of the whole mipmap level.