In three.js, an object's orientation can be specified by its Euler rotation vector object.rotation
. The three components of the rotation vector represent the rotation in radians around the object's internal x-axis, y-axis, and z-axis respectively.
The order in which the rotations are performed is specified by object.rotation.order
. The default order is "XYZ" -- rotation around the x-axis occurs first, then the y-axis, then the z-axis.
Rotations are performed with respect to the object's internal coordinate system -- not the world coordinate system. This is important. So, for example, after the x-rotation occurs, the object's y- and z- axes will generally no longer be aligned with the world axes. Rotations specified in this way are not unique.
So, for example, if in code you specify,
camera.rotation.y = y_radians; // Y first
camera.rotation.x = x_radians; // X second
camera.rotation.z = 0;
the rotations are applied in the object's rotation.order
, not in the order you specified them.
In your case, you may find it more intuitive to set rotation.order
to "YXZ", which is equivalent to "heading, pitch, and roll".
For more information about Euler angles, see the Wikipedia article. Three.js follows the Tait–Bryan convention, as explained in the article.
three.js r.61
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