You first need to get the script component of the variable, and if they're in different game objects, you'll need to pass the Game Object as a reference in the inspector.
For example, I have scriptA.cs
in GameObject A
and scriptB.cs
in GameObject B
:
scriptA.cs
// make sure its type is public so you can access it later on
public bool X = false;
scriptB.cs
public GameObject a; // you will need this if scriptB is in another GameObject
// if not, you can omit this
// you'll realize in the inspector a field GameObject will appear
// assign it just by dragging the game object there
public scriptA script; // this will be the container of the script
void Start(){
// first you need to get the script component from game object A
// getComponent can get any components, rigidbody, collider, etc from a game object
// giving it <scriptA> meaning you want to get a component with type scriptA
// note that if your script is not from another game object, you don't need "a."
// script = a.gameObject.getComponent<scriptA>(); <-- this is a bit wrong, thanks to user2320445 for spotting that
// don't need .gameObject because a itself is already a gameObject
script = a.getComponent<scriptA>();
}
void Update(){
// and you can access the variable like this
// even modifying it works
script.X = true;
}
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