I hate posting animations without a loading screen. That would be THE feature that would get me to upgrade to version 6. Until I can do that, is there a way to add one with an additional program? I'm not sure if swf files can even be edited after export. If an AS-made swf can be edited with Flash, I might be able to get someone else to add a loading screen afterward. However, I prefer to add it myself.
I currently mostly use Anime Studio(not the Pro version) for on-screen animations at church, so it's still been very useful so far(oh yeah, a transparent background would be useful sometimes), but I'm eager to make stuff to upload to Newgrounds too.
Loading screens for Flash animations
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- Garrett Williams
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Several questions there! Let's take them one at a time.
AS-produced swf files CAN be imported into Flash and edited. You need to be aware of a couple of things though. Sometimes, AS-produced swf files can be...erratic once you open them in Flash. Even if they look OK when playing as a stand-alone swf file, you can still have problems once they are opened in Flash. Can be a lot of to-ing and fro-ing to fix things. And AS-produced swf files are not optimised for Flash production -- each frame is a separate "event". This can make for large files.
If you are using Flash animations mostly on the desktop, I'd recommend getting Flash (Flash 8 would probably be fine) and buying Northcode SWF Studio as a "wrapper" program. It's not cheap, but Northcode would enable you to present your animations in a much more controlled manner (including transparency).
HTH.
AS-produced swf files CAN be imported into Flash and edited. You need to be aware of a couple of things though. Sometimes, AS-produced swf files can be...erratic once you open them in Flash. Even if they look OK when playing as a stand-alone swf file, you can still have problems once they are opened in Flash. Can be a lot of to-ing and fro-ing to fix things. And AS-produced swf files are not optimised for Flash production -- each frame is a separate "event". This can make for large files.
If you are using Flash animations mostly on the desktop, I'd recommend getting Flash (Flash 8 would probably be fine) and buying Northcode SWF Studio as a "wrapper" program. It's not cheap, but Northcode would enable you to present your animations in a much more controlled manner (including transparency).
HTH.
You can't have everything. Where would you put it?
I don't know about AS6, but AS5 exported a SWF format that can only be read by Flash MX 2004 and later versions (8, CS3 and CS4).
Ordinarily, if you wanted to import the SWF into earlier versions such as Flash 5 or Flash MX, then those versions will complain. But there is a workaround for these versions: You can use the marvelous Burak Kalayci's Swifty Decompress command-line utility (freeware; Windows only) to convert the exported SWF, enabling it to be imported into those earlier versions of Flash:
http://www.buraks.com/swifty/
Note the converted SWF file size will typically increase in size when converted. But once imported into Flash, you can break apart and optimize the vectors to bring the file size back down.
Cheers, Nick.
Ordinarily, if you wanted to import the SWF into earlier versions such as Flash 5 or Flash MX, then those versions will complain. But there is a workaround for these versions: You can use the marvelous Burak Kalayci's Swifty Decompress command-line utility (freeware; Windows only) to convert the exported SWF, enabling it to be imported into those earlier versions of Flash:
http://www.buraks.com/swifty/
Note the converted SWF file size will typically increase in size when converted. But once imported into Flash, you can break apart and optimize the vectors to bring the file size back down.
Cheers, Nick.
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