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10/14/2005 07:05:02 PM · #1 |
Ok so I am toying with macromedia flash 2004. What I am trying to do= when someone clicks on a thumbnail of a photo the larger displayed picture will slide off the screen to the left and the larger picture of the thumb they clicked on will slide in from the left. I have everything else looking pretty cool, but I am getting kind of frustrated here.
I am sure it cant be explained in a fourm so if someone could just poit me twoard a tutorial for that specific operation, it would be great.
I know it has to be somthing like adding some action script
on (release) {
gotoAndPlay (95)
}
Thanks
Travis
edit: also maybe something describing the difference between button and movie clips.
Message edited by author 2005-10-14 19:09:00.
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10/14/2005 08:31:12 PM · #2 |
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10/16/2005 05:01:39 PM · #3 |
so you want the small picture ( button ) to slide off the screen and a larger version ( button ) to slide on instead?
why? it slows browsing of the pictures..
how about having a button and the over or down state show the picture instead? |
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11/04/2005 01:37:41 AM · #4 |
For the sliding in/out parts, you would have to use multiple frames for each "action" and do a simple motion tween.
I think the actionscript code you posted would work, if on frame 95 you had the current thumbnail slide out and the bigger one slide in. Give it a go and post back?
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11/04/2005 02:26:38 AM · #5 |
the on(release) may work, but you can use dot notation to be a little bit faster with it
like this.onRelease=function(){
gotoAndPlay(95);
}
But instead of "95" maybe make a frame label like *start*, then put it in as gotoAndPlay("start");
Also, if you write the script in the first frame of the entire movie, you can consolidate the scripting to one area (for the most part). Then to affect a button, you could use absolute or relative to trigger stuff, like
_root.movie.button.onRelease=
or this.movie.button.onRelease=
Next question is hard to explain. In general, I like the power of movie clips. They can do anything a button can for the most part, and then some. Buttons are useful because they come with some preinstituted frames and work fairly easily. I understand how and when to use both, so I use both, but for the most part, I stick to movieclips.
Max
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11/04/2005 07:31:54 AM · #6 |
with multiple images, this would make for a HUGE swf file.
Originally posted by justin_hewlett: For the sliding in/out parts, you would have to use multiple frames for each "action" and do a simple motion tween.
I think the actionscript code you posted would work, if on frame 95 you had the current thumbnail slide out and the bigger one slide in. Give it a go and post back? |
scripting it as mentioned by PShizzy would be better, cleaner, easier to edit, and make for a much smaller movie. stay away from tweening.
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