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Become a Unity Shaders Guru

You're reading from   Become a Unity Shaders Guru Create advanced game visuals using code and graphs in Unity 2022

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837636747
Length 492 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Mina Pêcheux Mina Pêcheux
Author Profile Icon Mina Pêcheux
Mina Pêcheux
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Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Creating Shaders in Unity
2. Chapter 1: Re-Coding a Basic Blinn-Phong Shader with Unity/CG FREE CHAPTER 3. Part 2: Stepping Up to URP and the Shader Graph
4. Chapter 2: The Three Unity Render Pipelines 5. Chapter 3: Writing Your First URP Shader 6. Chapter 4: Transforming Your Shader into a Lit PBS Shader 7. Chapter 5: Discovering the Shader Graph with a Toon Shader 8. Part 3: Advanced Game Shaders
9. Chapter 6: Simulating Geometry Efficiently 10. Chapter 7: Exploring the Unity Compute Shaders and Procedural Drawing 11. Chapter 8: The Power of Ray Marching 12. Part 4: Optimizing Your Unity Shaders
13. Chapter 9: Shader Compilation, Branching, and Variants 14. Chapter 10: Optimizing Your Code, or Making Your Own Pipeline? 15. Part 5: The Toolbox
16. Chapter 11: A Little Suite of 2D Shaders 17. Chapter 12: Vertex Displacement Shaders 18. Chapter 13: Wireframes and Geometry Shaders 19. Chapter 14: Screen Effect Shaders 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: Some Quick Refreshers on Shaders in Unity

Generating a grid of randomized cubes

Alright – we now know what compute shaders and compute buffers are. To truly understand how they can be used in a real-life scenario, however, let’s discuss a basic example where compute shaders can greatly improve performance: the generation of a grid of randomly positioned and colored cubes.

We will first see how this simple process can be performed with a naive approach that runs on the CPU to get familiar with the problem, and then explore the limitations of this implementation. Finally, we will transfer our logic over to the GPU by using a compute shader and see how it boosts our performance.

Writing a naive C# implementation

Before diving into GPU offloading and performance enhancement, it stands to reason that we must first establish a baseline – or, in other words, a reference to compare our “improved” version against. So, first, let’s create a simple implementation of our random color...

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