Use the Editor settings to apply global settings for working in the Unity Editor. To access the Editor settings, go to Edit > Project Settings then select the Editor category.
Unity Remote is deprecated. For most use cases, Device Simulator package replaces Unity Remote.
Property | Description | |
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Device | Choose the device type you want to use for Unity Remote testing. Unity RemoteA downloadable app designed to help with Android, iOS and tvOS development. The app connects with Unity while you are running your project in Play Mode from the Unity Editor. More info See in Glossary is a downloadable app designed to help with Android, iOS and tvOS development. |
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CompressionA method of storing data that reduces the amount of storage space it requires. See Texture Compression, Animation Compression, Audio Compression, Build Compression. See in Glossary |
Choose the type of image compression to use when transmitting the game screen to the device via Unity Remote. Default is JPEG. | |
JPEG | JPEG usually gives higher compression and performance, but the graphics quality is a little lower. This is the default option. | |
PNG | PNG gives a more accurate representation of the game display, but can result in lower performance. | |
Resolution | Choose the resolution the game run at on Unity Remote. Default is Downsize. | |
Downsize | Display the game at a lower resolution. This results in better performance, but lower graphical accuracy. This is the default option. | |
Normal | Display the game at normal resolution. This results in better graphical accuracy, but lower performance. | |
Joystick Source | Choose the connection source for the joysticks you are using. Default is Remote. | |
Remote | Use joysticks that connect to a device running Unity Remote. This is the default option. | |
Local | Use joysticks that connect to the computer running the Editor. |
Property | Description | |
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Mode | Choose which format to use for storing serialized Assets. This is set to Force Text by default. Unity uses serialization to load and save Assets and AssetBundles to and from your computer’s hard drive. To help with version control merges, Unity can store Scene files in a text-based format. If you aren’t merging Scenes, Unity can store Scenes in a more space-efficient binary format, or allow both text and binary Scene files to exist at the same time. |
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Mixed | Assets in Binary mode remain in Binary mode, and Assets in Text mode remain in Text mode. Unity uses Binary mode by default for new Assets. | |
Force Binary | Convert all Assets to Binary mode, including new Assets. | |
Force Text | Convert all Assets to Text mode, including new Assets. This is the default option. | |
Reduce version controlA system for managing file changes. You can use Unity in conjunction with most common version control tools, including Perforce, Git, Mercurial and PlasticSCM. More info See in Glossary noise |
Forces the Editor to write references and similar YAML structures on one line, which reduces version control noise. When Unity reaches a line length of 80 characters it attempts to split the YAML data over multiple lines. |
Property | Description |
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Multi-process AssetBundle Building | Enable improvements to the AssetBundle Build Pipeline to reduce build times with multi process importing. Multi-process AssetBundle Building provides more efficient incremental content building. To learn more, refer to Multi-Process AssetBundle Building |
Property | Description | |
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Mode | Choose the default 2D or 3D development mode. Unity sets up the certain default behaviors according to the mode you choose to make development easier. Default is 3D. | |
3D | Set Unity up for 3D development. This is the default option. | |
2D | Set Unity up for 2D development. |
Property | Description |
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Remove unused Artifacts on Restart | Enable to remove unused artifact files in the Library folder and remove their entries in the Asset Database. This setting is a form of garbage collection. Use this setting to disable the Asset Database garbage collection, so that previous artifact revisions which are no longer used are still preserved after you restart the Editor. This is useful if you need to debug unexpected import results. To learn more, refer to Import Activity window. |
Parallel Import | Use multiple processes to import assets simultaneously. By default, Unity imports assets one after another sequentially on the main Editor process. Parallel importing can be faster than the default sequential method of importing. To learn more, refer to Importing assets simultaneously |
Desired worker count | Set the number of import worker processes that the import pipeline considers the optimal number to run in parallel. |
Standby Import Worker Count | Set the minimum number of worker processes to keep, even if they’re idle. If there are more worker processes than this, Unity shuts down import workers that have been idle for some time, to free up system resources. This property allows you to manage how Unity balances system resources when some processes are idle, compared with the time it takes to start up new import worker processes. You might see an improvement in import performance by increasing this value if you are frequently iterating on model, animation or texture work, and are therefore frequently importing batches of models or image files. |
Idle Import Worker Shutdown Delay | Set the amount of time in seconds to wait before shutting down an idle worker. |
Property | Description | |
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Mode | Choose which Cache Server to use. | |
Use global settings (stored in preferences) | The default Cache Server set in the Preferences window is used. | |
Enabled | Choose a specific Cache Server to use instead of the default. | |
Disabled | No Cache Server is used. |
Property | Description |
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Allow Auto Save | Enable an Auto Save toggle in PrefabAn asset type that allows you to store a GameObject complete with components and properties. The prefab acts as a template from which you can create new object instances in the scene. More info See in Glossary Mode which you can disable or enable. This is the default. When Allow Auto Save is disabled, there is no auto save in Prefab Mode in this project and the toggle doesn’t display. Refer to Auto Save in Prefab Mode to learn more. |
Regular Environment | Assign a Scene as an editing environment in Prefab Mode for regular Prefabs (that is, Prefabs with a regular Transform component). This allows you to edit your Prefab against a backdrop of your choosing rather than an empty Scene. Refer to Editing a Prefab in Prefab Mode for more information. |
UI Environment | Assign a Scene as an editing environment in Prefab Mode for UI Prefabs (that is, Prefabs with a Rect Transform component). This allows you to edit your Prefab against a backdrop of your choosing rather than an empty Scene. Refer to Editing a Prefab in Prefab Mode for more information. |
Property | Description |
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Use legacy Light ProbeLight probes store information about how light passes through space in your scene. A collection of light probes arranged within a given space can improve lighting on moving objects and static LOD scenery within that space. More info See in Glossary sample counts |
Use fixed Light Probe sample counts for baking with the Progressive LightmapperA tool in Unity that bakes lightmaps according to the arrangement of lights and geometry in your scene. More info See in Glossary. The sample counts are: 64 direct samples, 2048 indirect samples, and 2048 environment samples. |
Enable baked cookies support | For Projects created in Unity 2020.1 or newer, baked cookies are enabled for baked lights and mixed lights in the Progressive Lightmapper by default. For Projects created in versions of Unity prior to 2020.1, baked cookies are disabled for baked lights and mixed lights in the Progressive Lightmapper by default. This is to provide backwards compatibility. Enable this to enable baked cookies for baked lights and mixed lights in the Progressive Lightmapper. For more information, refer to Cookies. |
Property | Description | |
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Mode | Choose a mode to configure SpriteA 2D graphic objects. If you are used to working in 3D, Sprites are essentially just standard textures but there are special techniques for combining and managing sprite textures for efficiency and convenience during development. More info See in Glossary Atlas tool. This setting is set to Disabled by default. |
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Disabled | Do not pack Sprite Atlases. This is the default setting. | |
Sprite AtlasA utility that packs several sprite textures tightly together within a single texture known as an atlas. More info See in Glossary V1 - Enabled For Builds |
Pack Sprite Atlases for builds only. | |
Sprite Atlas V1 - Always Enabled | Pack Sprite Atlases for builds and before entering Play mode. | |
Sprite Atlas V2 - Enabled | Pack Sprite Atlases for both builds and before entering Play mode. | |
Sprite Atlas V2 - Enabled For Builds | Pack Sprite Atlases for builds only. |
Property | Description |
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Additional extensions to include | Include a list of additional file types to add to the C# Project. Separate each file type with a semicolon. By default, this field contains txt;xml;fnt;cd . |
Root namespace | Fill in the namespace to use for the C# project RootNamespace property. Refer to Common MSBuild Project Properties for more information. This field is blank by default. |
Property | Description | |
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BC7 Compressor | Select the compressor to use for BC7 format texture compression3D Graphics hardware requires Textures to be compressed in specialized formats which are optimized for fast Texture sampling. More info See in Glossary. |
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ETC Compressor | Select the compressors to use for different compression qualities of ETC Textures. The compression tools available are etcpak, ETCPACK and Etc2Comp. These are all third-party compressor libraries. |
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Legacy | Use the configuration that was available before ETC Texture compression became configurable. This sets the following properties: - Fast: ETCPACK Fast - Normal: ETCPACK Fast - Best: ETCPACK Best |
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Default | Use the default configuration for Unity. This sets the following properties: - Fast: etcpack - Normal: ETCPACK Fast - Best: Etc2Comp Best |
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Custom | Customize the ETC Texture compression configuration. When you choose this option, the Fast, Normal, and Best properties are enabled. This maps to the Compressor Quality setting in the Texture Importer for the supported platforms. | |
Fast | Define the compression quality tool to use for Fast compression. This property is modifiable only when ETC Compressor is set to Custom. | |
Normal | Define the compression quality tool to use for Normal compression. This property is modifiable only when ETC Compressor is set to Custom. | |
Best | Define the compression quality tool to use for Best compression. This property is modifiable only when ETC Compressor is set to Custom. |
Property | Description | |
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Mode | Choose the file line endings to apply to new scriptsA piece of code that allows you to create your own Components, trigger game events, modify Component properties over time and respond to user input in any way you like. More info See in Glossary created within the Editor. Note that configuring these settings does not convert existing scripts. |
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OS Native | Apply line endings based on the operating system the Editor is running on. | |
Unix | Apply line endings based on the Unix operating system. | |
Windows | Apply line endings based on the Windows operating system. |
Property | Description |
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Enable Texture Streaming in Play Mode | Enable Mipmap Streaming in Play mode. The Quality Texture Streaming setting must also be enabled. |
Enable Texture Streaming in Edit Mode | Enable Mipmap Streaming in Edit Mode. The Quality Texture Streaming setting must also be enabled. |
Load texture data on demand | Load CPU-side texture data for streaming textures from disk asynchronously on demand to avoid some stalls and reduce CPU memory usage. This setting requires Editor restart. Refer to Configuring Editor streaming settings to learn more. |
Property | Description |
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Asynchronous ShaderA program that runs on the GPU. More info See in Glossary Compilation |
Enable this checkbox to make Unity compile shaders in the background. While compiling, the Unity engine uses a placeholder Shader to render geometry in the Editor. When Shader compilation has finished, the engine swaps your Shader Variant back in. This means the Editor runs seamlessly, without having to wait for the Unity engine to compile every single Shader variant before rendering. For more information, refer to Asynchronous Shader compilation. |
Property | Description |
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Game Object Naming | Naming scheme for duplicated GameObjectsThe fundamental object in Unity scenes, which can represent characters, props, scenery, cameras, waypoints, and more. A GameObject’s functionality is defined by the Components attached to it. More info See in Glossary. Duplicated or instantiated GameObjects are named by appending successive numbers to the original object name. |
Game Object Digits | Sets the amount of digits to use for duplicated GameObject numbers. |
Space Before Number in Asset Names | Controls whether to insert a space before a number in duplicated Asset names. |
Property | Description |
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Use IMGUI Default InspectorA Unity window that displays information about the currently selected GameObject, asset or project settings, allowing you to inspect and edit the values. More info See in Glossary |
Revert to using IMGUI to generate Default Inspectors where no custom Inspector or Editor is defined. |
EditorManager