I am trying to limit the camera position movements to specific areas defined by a 3D object/objects children. For example, if I had a walkway object on the ocean and I only wanted my user to be able to move the camera forward and backward on that walkway. Similar to a first person controller navigation mesh in Unity but without the AI aspects.
I would enjoy an AFrame based solution, but I do not mind writing a custom component if there is a THREE js solution.
Thank you!
you can create a THREE.Box3 to get the boundaries of the 3D object/objects children by:
var box = new THREE.Box3();
box.setFromObject(yourObject);
Inside the first person controller you can check if the camera is out of bounds:
if(camera.position.x > box.max.x){
camera.position.x = box.max.x;
}
if(camera.position.x < box.min.x){
camera.position.x = box.max.x;
}
if(camera.position.z > box.max.z){
camera.position.z = box.max.z;
}
if(camera.position.z < box.min.z){
camera.position.z = box.max.z;
}
I hope it will be helpful
Related
In Three.js, I have a group of meshes that is loaded from outside with help of FBX loader. The group has six meshes inside. My task is to make this meshes follow pointer when they get hovered. More precisely, I'd like to have a sort of magnetic effect (just like navbar items in this pen, but with meshes in Three.js).
I think, firstly, I have to detect, where currently pointer is, i.e. get position of cursor in world coordinates system, and then translate meshes towards it. But when I try to get the position of cursor, it seems to be wrong.
Having said that, I have two questions:
How to get proper cursor's position relative to the world coordinates?
How to change position of each of the group's meshes so that they get translated against the cursor?
Here is what have I done so far:
Hi everyone.
In Three.js, I have a group of meshes that is loaded from outside with help of FBX loader. The group has six meshes inside. My task is to make this meshes follow pointer when their canvas get hovered. More precisely, I'd like to have a sort of magnetic effect (just like navbar items in this pen, but with meshes of Three.js).
I think, firstly, I have to detect, where currently pointer on canvas is, i.e. get position of cursor in world coordinates system, and then translate meshes towards it. But when I try to get the position of cursor, it seems to be wrong.
Having said that, I have two questions:
How to get proper cursor's position relative to the world coordinates?
How to change position of each of the group's meshes so that they get translated against the cursor?
Here is what have I done so far. Function that translates meshes isn't written yet. Mousemove callback returns pretty big digits, though:
// Load object and play a third-party animation
loader.load("Object_001.fbx", (object) => {
mixer = new THREE.AnimationMixer(object);
const action = mixer.clipAction(object.animations[0]);
action.play();
object.traverse((child) => {
if (child.isMesh) {
child.material.map = texture;
child.material.needsUpdate = true;
}
});
scene.add(object);
});
// log coordinates of the pointer
const mouse = new THREE.Vector3();
const position = new THREE.Vector3();
function onMouseMove(event) {
mouse.set(
(event.clientX / window.innerWidth) * 2 - 1,
-(event.clientY / window.innerHeight) * 2 + 1,
0.5
);
mouse.unproject(camera);
mouse.sub(camera.position).normalize();
const distance = -camera.position.z / mouse.z;
position.copy(camera.position).add(mouse.multiplyScalar(distance));
console.log(position);
}
wrapperElement.addEventListener("mousemove", onMouseMove);
Thanks in advance.
Made a codepen here:
https://codepen.io/cdeep/pen/YzxPPZQ
The cursor only exists in the canvas dom element which is a rendering of the camera view frustum.
The easiest way to make the object follow a mouse is to get the point of intersection of the mouse with another object in the 3d scene and set the object position to the intersection point. The above codepen showcases that.
raycaster.setFromCamera( mouse, camera );
const intersects = raycaster.intersectObjects([ground]);
if(intersects.length) {
const { point } = intersects[0];
cube.position.copy(point.setY(0.5));
}
You could also position it at a fixed distance from the mouse but it looks odd in my opinion:
const distance = 10;
raycaster.setFromCamera( mouse, camera );
const { origin, direction } = raycaster.ray;
cube.position.copy(origin.clone().add(direction.multiplyScalar(distance)));
Documentation for raycaster:
https://threejs.org/docs/index.html?q=ray#api/en/core/Raycaster
Raycasting is used for mouse picking (working out what objects in the
3d space the mouse is over) amongst other things.
I'm rather new to threejs, so what I'm doing might not be the most efficient way.
I have an object in AR on a mobile device and I want to know if I intersect with it when touching on the screen.
I use the following code to generate the raycast, and it works initally.
const tempMatrix = new THREE.Matrix4();
tempMatrix.identity().extractRotation(this.controller.matrixWorld);
this.raycaster.ray.origin.setFromMatrixPosition(this.controller.matrixWorld);
this.raycaster.ray.direction.set(0, 0, -1).applyMatrix4(tempMatrix);
However, I have the ability to reposition the object (i.e. reset the position so the object is in front, relative to the current camera direction and position) by moving and rotating the whole scene.
After the repositioning, the raycasting is completely offset and is not casting rays anywhere near where I touch the screen.
Repositioning is done like this (while it works, if there's a better way, let me know!) :
public handleReposition(): void {
const xRotation = Math.abs(this.camera.rotation.x) > Math.PI / 2 ? -Math.PI : 0;
const yRotation = this.camera.rotation.y;
this.scene.rotation.set(xRotation, yRotation, xRotation);
this.scene.position.set(this.camera.position.x, this.camera.position.y, this.camera.position.z);
}
How can I achieve to raycast to the correct new location?
Thanks!
Assuming this.scene is actually the main threejs Scene, it's usually a bad idea to change its rotation or position, since it will affect everything inside the scene, including the controller. I'd suggest moving your object instead, or add your object(s) to a Group and move that.
I'm fairly new to three.js and trying to get a better understanding of ray casting. I have used it so far in a game to show when an object collides with another on the page which works perfectly. In the game I'm building this is to take health from the hero as it crashes into walls.
I am now trying to implement a target which when hovered over some objects it will auto shoot. However the target only registers a target hit once the object passes through the target mesh rather than when its ray is cast through it.
to further detail this, the ray is cast from the camera through the target, if the target is on a mesh (stored as an object array) then I want it to trigger a function.
within my update function I have this:
var ray = new THREE.Raycaster();
var crossHairClone = crossHair.position.clone();
var coards = {};
coards.x = crossHairClone.x
coards.y = crossHairClone.y
ray.setFromCamera(coards, camera);
var collisionResults = ray.intersectObjects( collidableMeshList );
if ( collisionResults.length > 0 ) {
console.log('Target Hit!', collisionResults)
}
The console log is only triggered when the collidableMeshList actually touches the target mesh rather than when it is aiming at it.
How do I extend the ray to pass through the target (which I thought it was already doing) so that if anything hits the ray then it triggers my console log.
Edit
I've added a URL to the game in progress. There are other wider issues with the game, my current focus is just the target ray casting.
Game Link
Many thanks to everyone who helped me along the way on this one but I finally solved it, only not through the means that I had expected to. Upon reading into the setFromCamera() function it looks like it is mainly used around mouse coards which in my instance was not what I wanted. I wanted a target on the page and the ray to pass through this. For some reason my Ray was shooting vertically up from the centre of the whole scene.
In the end I tried a different approach and set the Rays position and direction directly rather rely on setting it from the cameras position.
var vector = new THREE.Vector3(crossHair.position.x, crossHair.position.y, crossHair.position.z);
var targetRay = new THREE.Raycaster(camera.position, vector.sub(camera.position).normalize());
var enemyHit = targetRay.intersectObject( enemy );
if ( enemyHit.length > 0 ) {
console.log('Target Hit!', targetRay)
}
I'll leave this up for a while before accepting this answer in case anyone has a better approach than this or has any corrections over what I have said in regards to setFromCamera().
I am trying to make use of Raycaster in a ThreeJS scene to create a sort of VR interaction.
Everything works fine in normal mode, but not when I enable stereo effect.
I am using the following snippet of code.
// "camera" is a ThreeJS camera, "objectContainer" contains objects (Object3D) that I want to interact with
var raycaster = new THREE.Raycaster(),
origin = new THREE.Vector2();
origin.x = 0; origin.y = 0;
raycaster.setFromCamera(origin, camera);
var intersects = raycaster.intersectObjects(objectContainer.children, true);
if (intersects.length > 0 && intersects[0].object.visible === true) {
// trigger some function myFunc()
}
So basically when I try the above snippet of code in normal mode, myFunc gets triggered whenever I am looking at any of the concerned 3d objects.
However as soon as I switch to stereo mode, it stops working; i.e., myFunc never gets triggered.
I tried updating the value of origin.x to -0.5. I did that because in VR mode, the screen gets split into two halves. However that didn't work either.
What should I do to make the raycaster intersect the 3D objects in VR mode (when stereo effect is turned on)?
Could you please provide a jsfiddle with the code?
Basically, if you are using stereo in your app, it means you are using 2 cameras, therefore you need to check your intersects on both cameras views, this could become an expensive process.
var cameras =
{ 'camera1': new THREE.PerspectiveCamera(50, window.innerWidth / window.innerHeight, 1, 10000),
'camera2': new THREE.PerspectiveCamera(50, window.innerWidth / window.innerHeight, 1, 10000)
};
for (var cam in cameras) {
raycaster.setFromCamera(origin, cameras[cam]);
//continue your logic
}
You could use a vector object that simulates the camera intersection to avoid checking twice, but this depends on what you are trying to achieve.
I encountered a similar problem, I eventually found the reason. Actually in StereoEffect THREE.js displays the meshes on the two eyes, but in reality is actually adds only one mesh to the scene, exactly in the middle of the line left-eye-mesh <-> right-eye-mesh, hidden to the viewer.
So when you use the raycaster, you need to use it on the real mesh on the middle, not the illusion displayed on each eye !
I detailled here how to do it
Three.js StereoEffect displays meshes across 2 eyes
Hopes it solves your problem !
You can use my StereoEffect.js file in your project for resolving problem. See example of using. See my Raycaster stereo pull request also.
I am using bullet/ammo.js with three.js. I have a 3d mesh and I want to use the exact shape for collision detection with a soft body. Is there a way I can create a 3d rigid body (in bullet) from a mesh (in three.js)?
Here is an example:
http://kidzinski.com/miamisura/lazy3d/ (please wait a second for the 3d model to download). I have a cloth falling on a 3d body and I need to simulate collision of this cloth with the body.
I am new to these frameworks sorry if I fundamentally misunderstood something.
It looks like you can do some work to turn an arbitrary Three.js mesh into a Bullet concave mesh. This is supported by Physi.js, which is a plug and play solution to link Three.js directly to ammo.js. I personally wouldn't recommend using the project (Physi.js) but you can look at the source code to see how they implement concave meshes.
First they loop over the geometry to create a custom list of "triangle" data objects on these lines of physi.js
for ( i = 0; i < geometry.faces.length; i++ ) {
face = geometry.faces[i];
if ( face instanceof THREE.Face3) {
triangles.push([
...
Then these triangles are passed off to Ammo.js to make a new Ammo.btBvhTriangleMeshShape on these lines:
for ( i = 0; i < description.triangles.length; i++ ) {
...
triangle_mesh.addTriangle( _vec3_1, _vec3_2, _vec3_3, true );
}
...
shape = new Ammo.btBvhTriangleMeshShape( triangle_mesh, true, true );
This should be a good starting point for building your own Ammo.js custom mesh.
There are lots of threads around the web, that Physijs Concave mesh does not work with collission. It seems, that btBvhTriangleMeshShape is not intended to work with collission in ammo.js, as I found out searching for that topic in bullet related forums.
What worked for me, is btConvexHullShape:
var triangle, triangle_mesh = new Ammo.btTriangleMesh;
var btConvexHullShape = new Ammo.btConvexHullShape();
var _vec3_1 = new Ammo.btVector3(0,0,0);
var _vec3_2 = new Ammo.btVector3(0,0,0);
var _vec3_3 = new Ammo.btVector3(0,0,0);
for ( i = 0; i < triangles.length; i++ ) {
triangle = triangles[i];
_vec3_1.setX(triangle[0].x);
_vec3_1.setY(triangle[0].y);
_vec3_1.setZ(triangle[0].z);
btConvexHullShape.addPoint(_vec3_1,true);
_vec3_2.setX(triangle[1].x);
_vec3_2.setY(triangle[1].y);
_vec3_2.setZ(triangle[1].z);
btConvexHullShape.addPoint(_vec3_2,true);
_vec3_3.setX(triangle[2].x);
_vec3_3.setY(triangle[2].y);
_vec3_3.setZ(triangle[2].z);
btConvexHullShape.addPoint(_vec3_3,true);
triangle_mesh.addTriangle(
_vec3_1,
_vec3_2,
_vec3_3,
true
);
}
return btConvexHullShape;
In the process of learning physic based 3d with threejs, I also want to mention the following best practice: when using complex models, create a low poly model that you can push to that converter function instead of the original model, or you will encounter a stack overflow.