Yarn Spinner 3.1
Yarn Spinner for Unity 3.1 contains a number of improvements and useful changes.
Dialogue Runner Is Now More Async
The dialogue runner's StartDialogue and Stop methods are now async, and return a task. When you call StartDialogue, you'll receive a task (either a System.Threading.Tasks task, a UnityEngine.Awaitable, or a UniTask) that will complete after every dialogue presenter has finished running its OnDialogueStartedAsync method. Likewise, the Stop method will finish after every dialogue presenter has finished running its OnDialogueCompleteAsync method. This is really useful for making sure that you don't accidentally make a change to your scene in the middle of your dialogue presenters getting ready.
Dialogue Option Fallthrough
In Yarn Spinner, you can add a condition to the end of an option. If the condition evaluates to false, Yarn Spinner will mark the option as "unavailable". It's up to your game to decide what that means - you might want to make the option visible but unselectable, or you might want to hide the option from the player entirely. However, if every option is unavailable, the player has no option they could select. Previously, this could cause your game to have to soft-lock the player, since they weren't able to proceed.
In Yarn Spinner 3.1, dialogue presenters are now allowed to tell the Dialogue Runner that no option was selected at all. When this happens, Yarn Spinner will skip the options and move on to the next part of the script:
Guard: Who goes there?
// If the player is a thief, a royal visitor, or a merchant, then
// go run the appropriate conversation for that. The player might be
// some combination of the three, so let them choose.
-> A thief! <<if $player_is_thief>>
<<jump Guard_Thief_Conversation>>
-> A royal visitor! <<if $player_is_royal_visitor>>
<<jump Guard_RoyalVisitor_Conversation>>
-> A merchant! <<if $player_is_merchant>>
<<jump Guard_Merchant_Conversation>>
// But if the player is NONE of those, then none of the options would have
// been available. We'll fall through to here.
Player: I'm nobody!
<<jump Guard_Nobody_Conversation>>Lines Know Where They Came From
When Yarn Spinner sends a line to your game, it wraps up the line in an object called a LocalizedLine. Previously, if your game has multiple Dialogue Runners that are running at the same time, it wasn't possible to know which runner the line came from. In Yarn Spinner 3.1, the LocalizedLine now has a Source property that tells you where it came from.
Options Can Now Be Hurried Up And Cancelled
Just like how lines have a separate 'hurry up' and 'next' cancellation tokens that act as a signal to move things along, options now have the same 'hurry up' and 'next' tokens. (Previously, they only had a single cancellation token that signalled that option selection was no longer necessary.) This allows your game to signal that you want to hurry up the presentation of your dialogue's options.
New Typewriter System
We've updated the way that typewriters are used in the built-in Line Presenter system, to make it easier to customise. This is useful for when you want to take full control over how the line appears over time, and for when you want to have in-game events occur (like sound effects) as the line appears.
To create a custom typewriter, create a class that implements IAsyncTypewriter. You can find an example of how to write a custom typewriter in the source code for the LetterTypewriter class.
Removed Legacy DialogueView Classes
DialogueView ClassesYarn Spinner 3.0 introduced a new programming model for presenting dialogue, called Dialogue Presenters. As part of the rollout of this new API, we made the old DialogueView class act as a compatibility layer, and marked it as deprecated. Yarn Spinner 3.1 removes this deprecated code. If you have code that started life as a Yarn Spinner 2.0 project, you will need to migrate your legacy dialogue presentation UI code to use Dialogue Presenters.
Last updated
Was this helpful?
