Makes a rotation
by applying YawRightDegrees
, PitchUpDegrees
, and RollClockwiseDegrees
, in that order:
- first a yaw about the Z axis with a positive angle indicating a clockwise rotation when viewed from above,
- then a pitch about the new Y axis with a positive angle indicating 'nose up',
- followed by a roll about the new X axis axis with a positive angle indicating a clockwise rotation when viewed along +X.
Note that these conventions differ from
MakeRotation
but matchApplyYaw
,ApplyPitch
, andApplyRoll
.
Verse using statement |
using { /UnrealEngine.com/Temporary/SpatialMath } |
MakeRotationFromYawPitchRollDegrees<native><public>(YawRightDegrees:float, PitchUpDegrees:float, RollClockwiseDegrees:float)<reads><converges>:
rotation
Parameters
MakeRotationFromYawPitchRollDegrees
takes the following parameters:
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
YawRightDegrees |
float |
|
PitchUpDegrees |
float |
|
RollClockwiseDegrees |
float |
Attributes and Effects
The following attributes and effects determine how MakeRotationFromYawPitchRollDegrees
behaves and how you can use it in your programs. For the complete list of attribute and effect specifiers, see the Specifiers Page.
Attribute | Meaning |
---|---|
native |
Indicates that the definition details of the element are implemented in C++. Verse definitions with the native specifier auto-generate C++ definitions that a developer can then fill out its implementation. You can use this specifier on classes, interfaces, enums, methods, and data. |
public |
The identifier is universally accessible. You can use this on modules, classes, interfaces, structs, enums, methods, and data. |
Effect | Meaning |
---|---|
reads |
This effect indicates that the same inputs to the function may not always produce the same output. The behavior depends on factors external to the specified inputs, such as memory or the containing package version. |
converges |
This effect guarantees that not only is there no side effect from the execution of the related function, but that the function definitely completes (does not infinitely recurse). This effect can only appear in functions that have the native specifer, but this isn’t checked by the compiler. Code that is used to provide default values of class or values for global variables are required to have this effect. The functions sin() , cos() , and tan() are examples of functions that have the converges effect. |