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Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams

Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

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Page 1: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Flash Week 4

Presentation by Mindy McAdams

Page 2: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Review of best practices

The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing ActionScript (unless your movie has NO actions)

The second layer in the main Timeline: Named “labels” and contains all frames containing a frame label

Page 3: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Extend a short layer in the Timeline If the layer has contents (is gray or blue), then

right-click in the next frame and insert a blank keyframe (white)

Page 4: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Right-click in the next frame and insert a blank keyframe (white) – or press F7

Page 5: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Right-click in the final frame of the Timeline and insert a (regular) frame – this extends the layer

Page 6: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Nice! All layers are the same length This becomes more important as your Flash

movies become more complex

Page 7: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Review of best practices

Extend all layers in the main Timeline to be the same length

All unnecessary keyframes should be “cleared” – that is, changed to regular frames (no dot in the frame)

Why? Because a keyframe should be used only when something changes in that layer

Page 8: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Two layers here are short All layers should be the same length

Page 9: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Right-click to get menu and extend the layer Or press F5

Page 10: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Now we have two unnecessary keyframes In which two layers?

Page 11: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Right-click to get menu and clear a keyframe (making it a regular frame instead)

Page 12: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Lovely even layers! No unnecessary keyframes! One more thing: There is (possibly) an

unnecessary frame at end of “coconut” layer …

Page 13: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Review of best practices

Fix all “broken” tweens in your Timeline A dotted line in a layer means your tween

is “broken” is some way A solid line is a proper tween If you see Tween 1 or Tween 2 in your

Library, something was moved without first being converted to a symbol

Tween 1 is a bad sign!

Page 14: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Here we can see two good tweens (solid lines)

Page 15: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Here we see that the second tween is “broken” (dotted line) – why?

Page 16: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Here we see that the second tween is “broken” (dotted line) for a different reason – why?

Page 17: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Check in your Library

If you see Tween 1, Tween 2, etc., it means you made a mistake

You tweened something that was not a symbol

Page 18: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Those bad symbols (Tween 1, etc.) in your Library may be a clue to a “broken” tween

Page 19: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

Summary

Extend all layers in the Timeline to the same length

Change all unnecessary keyframes to regular frames (with no dot)

Fix all “broken” tweens (dotted lines) in your Timeline

If you see Tween 1 or Tween 2 in your Library, figure out why, and fix it

Page 20: Flash Week 4 Presentation by Mindy McAdams. Review of best practices The top layer in the main Timeline: Named “actions” and contains all “a” frames containing

The End

Monday after Spring Break: QUIZ on Lesson 7, but no exercise is due