Learn about the Dialogue Runner, which runs the contents of your Yarn Scripts and delivers lines, options and commands to your game.
The Dialogue Runner is the bridge between the dialogue that you've written in your Yarn scripts and the other components of your game. It's a component that's responsible for loading, running and managing the contents of a Yarn Project, and for delivering the content of your Yarn scripts to the other parts of your game, such as your user interface.
Setting up a Dialogue Runner is the first step in adding dialogue to your game. To use a Dialogue Runner, you add it to a game object in your scene, connect it to Dialogue Views, and provide it with a Yarn Project to run.
When you want to start running the dialogue in your game, you call the Dialogue Runner's StartDialogue method. When you do this, the Dialogue Runner will begin delivering lines, options and commands to its Dialogue Views.
The Dialogue Runner is designed to work with other components of Yarn Spinner for Unity:
The contents of your dialogue are delivered to your Dialogue Views.
The values of variables are stored and retrieved using the Dialogue Runner's Variable Storage.
The content that users should see - that is, the text in their current language, voice over clips, and other assets - are retrieved using the Dialogue Runner's Line Provider.
The bare-bones minimum that a Dialogue Runner needs in order to work is a Yarn Project and at least one Dialogue View. If you don't set up a Variable Storage or a Line Provider, the Dialogue Runner will use temporary placeholders.
If your game is using the Unity Localization system, your Dialogue Runner must use a Unity Localised Line Provider.
Property | Description |
---|---|
Yarn Project
The Yarn Project that this Dialogue Runner is running.
Variable Storage
The Variable Storage to store and retrieve variable data from. If you do not set this, the Dialogue Runner will create an In Memory Variable Storage for you at runtime.
Line Provider
The Line Provider to use to get user-facing content for each line. If you do not set this, the Dialogue Runner will create a Text Line Provider for you at runtime.
Dialogue Views
The Dialogue Views to send lines, options and commands to.
Start Automatically
If this is turned on, the Dialogue Runner will start running the node named Start Node when the scene starts. If this is not turned on, you will need to call StartDialogue to start running.
Start Node
If Start Automatically is turned on, the Dialogue Runner will start running this node when the scene starts. (If your Yarn Project does not contain a node with this name, an error will be reported.)
Automatically Continue Lines
If this is turned on, lines will automatically continue as soon as all Dialogue Views have finished presenting them. If this is turned off, the Dialogue Runner will wait for a Dialogue View to call OnViewUserIntentNextLine to continue.
Run Selected Options as Lines
If this is turned on, when the user chooses an option, the Dialogue Runner will run the selected option as if it were a Line.
Verbose Logging
If this is turned on, the Dialogue Runner will log information about the state of each line to the Console as it's run.
On Node Start
A Unity Event that's fired when the Dialogue Runner begins running a new node. This may be fired multiple times during a dialogue run.
On Node Complete
A Unity Event that's fired when the Dialogue Runner reaches the end of a node. This may be fired multiple times during a dialogue run.
On Dialogue Complete
A Unity Event that's fired when the Dialogue Runner stops running dialogue.
On Command
A Unity Event that's fired when a Command is encountered. This will only be called if no other part of the system has already handled the command, such as command handlers registered via YarnCommand or AddCommandHandler.