Compass Effects

A CompassEffect causes a node to inherit its rotation (or pos or scale, if specified) from some other reference node in the graph, or more often from the root.

In its purest form, a CompassEffect is used to keep the node’s rotation fixed relative to the top of the scene graph, despite other transforms that may exist above the node. Hence the name: the node behaves like a magnetic compass, always pointing in the same direction.

As an couple of generalizing extensions, the CompassEffect may also be set up to always orient its node according to some other reference node than the root of the scene graph. Furthermore, it may optionally adjust any of pos, rotation, or scale, instead of necessarily rotation; and it may adjust individual pos and scale components. (Rotation may not be adjusted on an individual component basis, that’s just asking for trouble.)

Be careful when using the pos and scale modes. In these modes, it’s possible for the CompassEffect to move its node far from its normal bounding volume, causing culling to fail. If this is an issue, you may need to explicitly set a large (or infinite) bounding volume on the effect node.

nodePath.setCompass()

If a NodePath is supplied to the set_compass() call, it indicates the node to which the rotation will be kept relative (which is render by default).