How to combine meshes in Unity3D



public static Mesh CombineMeshes(this GameObject aGo) {

MeshRenderer[] meshRenderers = aGo.GetComponentsInChildren<MeshRenderer>(false);

int totalVertexCount = 0;

int totalMeshCount = 0;



if(meshRenderers != null && meshRenderers.Length > 0) {

foreach(MeshRenderer meshRenderer in meshRenderers) {

MeshFilter filter = meshRenderer.gameObject.GetComponent<MeshFilter>();

if(filter != null && filter.sharedMesh != null) {

totalVertexCount += filter.sharedMesh.vertexCount;

totalMeshCount++;

}

}

}



if(totalMeshCount == 0) {

Debug.Log("No meshes found in children. There's nothing to combine.");

return null;

}

if(totalMeshCount == 1) {

Debug.Log("Only 1 mesh found in children. There's nothing to combine.");

return null;

}

if(totalVertexCount > 65535) {

Debug.Log("There are too many vertices to combine into 1 mesh ("+totalVertexCount+"). The max. limit is 65535");

return null;

}



Mesh mesh = new Mesh();

Matrix4x4 myTransform = aGo.transform.worldToLocalMatrix;

List<Vector3> vertices = new List<Vector3>();

List<Vector3> normals = new List<Vector3>();

List<Vector2> uv1s = new List<Vector2>();

List<Vector2> uv2s = new List<Vector2>();

Dictionary<Material, List<int>> subMeshes = new Dictionary<Material, List<int>>();



if(meshRenderers != null && meshRenderers.Length > 0) {

foreach(MeshRenderer meshRenderer in meshRenderers) {

MeshFilter filter = meshRenderer.gameObject.GetComponent<MeshFilter>();

if(filter != null && filter.sharedMesh != null) {

MergeMeshInto(filter.sharedMesh, meshRenderer.sharedMaterials, myTransform * filter.transform.localToWorldMatrix, vertices, normals, uv1s, uv2s, null, null, null, null, subMeshes);

if(filter.gameObject != aGo) {

filter.gameObject.SetActive(false);

}

}

}

}



mesh.vertices = vertices.ToArray();

if(normals.Count>0) mesh.normals = normals.ToArray();

if(uv1s.Count>0) mesh.uv = uv1s.ToArray();

if(uv2s.Count>0) mesh.uv2 = uv2s.ToArray();

mesh.subMeshCount = subMeshes.Keys.Count;

Material[] materials = new Material[subMeshes.Keys.Count];

int mIdx = 0;

foreach(Material m in subMeshes.Keys) {

materials[mIdx] = m;

mesh.SetTriangles(subMeshes[m].ToArray(), mIdx++);

}



if(meshRenderers != null && meshRenderers.Length > 0) {

MeshRenderer meshRend = aGo.GetComponent<MeshRenderer>();

if(meshRend == null) meshRend = aGo.AddComponent<MeshRenderer>();

meshRend.sharedMaterials = materials;



MeshFilter meshFilter = aGo.GetComponent<MeshFilter>();

if(meshFilter == null) meshFilter = aGo.AddComponent<MeshFilter>();

meshFilter.sharedMesh = mesh;

}

return mesh;

}



private static void MergeMeshInto(Mesh meshToMerge, Material[] ms, Matrix4x4 transformMatrix, List<Vector3> vertices, List<Vector3> normals, List<Vector2> uv1s, List<Vector2> uv2s, Dictionary<Material, List<int>> subMeshes) {

if(meshToMerge == null) return;

int vertexOffset = vertices.Count;

Vector3[] vs = meshToMerge.vertices;



for(int i=0;i<vs.Length;i++) {

vs[i] = transformMatrix.MultiplyPoint3x4(vs[i]);

}

vertices.AddRange(vs);



Quaternion rotation = Quaternion.LookRotation(transformMatrix.GetColumn(2), transformMatrix.GetColumn(1));

Vector3[] ns = meshToMerge.normals;

if(ns!=null && ns.Length>0) {

for(int i=0;i<ns.Length;i++) ns[i] = rotation * ns[i];

normals.AddRange(ns);

}



Vector2[] uvs = meshToMerge.uv;

if(uvs!=null && uvs.Length>0) uv1s.AddRange(uvs);

uvs = meshToMerge.uv2;

if(uvs!=null && uvs.Length>0) uv2s.AddRange(uvs);



for(int i=0;i<ms.Length;i++) {

if(i<meshToMerge.subMeshCount) {

int[] ts = meshToMerge.GetTriangles(i);

if(ts.Length>0) {

if(ms[i]!=null && !subMeshes.ContainsKey(ms[i])) {

subMeshes.Add(ms[i], new List<int>());

}

List<int> subMesh = subMeshes[ms[i]];

for(int t=0;t<ts.Length;t++) {

ts[t] += vertexOffset;

}

subMesh.AddRange(ts);

}

}

}

}





public GameObject gameObjectWithMultipleMeshesInChildren;



gameObjectWithMultipleMeshesInChildren.CombineMeshes();



In the Unity API you can find the function Mesh.CombineMeshes. It is almost useless. It will combine the meshes you pass to it into 1 mesh with the option to make a separate submesh for each of them. But when the original meshes already had submeshes this info is lost. I haven't tested it but the documentation doesn't mention anything about skinned meshes, so i think boneweights and bindposes are lost as well.So I wrote my own function instead. It combines all the meshes it finds in a GameObject and its children. It makes a sub mesh for each unique shared material it finds. So when you have 5 children, that each have 3 sub meshes, you end up with 1 mesh, 15 sub meshes. Unless some of the children use the same shared materials in which case the number of submeshes is smaller.This code is part of the Asset Store package SimpleLOD . It will disable the children and add a MeshFilter + MeshRenderer to the receiving GameObject.I left the code for merging skinned meshes and recomputing tangents out (sorry). If you need to combine skinned meshes or need tangents (for bumped materials) as well, you may want to get that package from the asset store. You will also need it when you want to reduce the number of triangles in your mesh or when you want to generate LOD levels for your models.You can use it as easy as this:How it works:We scan the gameobject and search through it's hierarchy for MeshRenderers.For each meshrenderer we find the MeshFilter and count the vertices.We then check to see if we have more than 1 mesh and less than 64K vertices, because this is the max Unity will allow.We make a new Mesh and create empty Lists for vertices, normals, etc.We read the transform matrix for the gameObjectWe make a Dictionary with a List of triangles for each unique material we findWe go through all the MeshRenderers a second time, find the Meshes and for each mesh we call the function MergeMeshInto(). As parameters we use:the found child mesh,the shared materials found in the renderera transform matrix computed as parent world to local transform matrix * child local to world transform matrixthe lists we created for vertices, normals etcthe dictionary with triangles per materialAfter this loop we have all the vertices, normals, and triangles store in our lists and dictionary. So now we can populate the new Mesh with them.Setting the vertices, normals and uv is easy.We go through all the keys of the dictionary and add the material to a new Materials array. We also set the triangles for the sub mesh.And finally we add a MeshRenderer and MeshFilter if they were not yet present and we set the materials and new Mesh in them.