Snack attack, mofo. They dig Yahoo! Maps (even show a screenshot), MapQuest, and clearly dig Google Maps.
SNL Parody – Chronicles of Narnia
Via Frankie Milkshoes.
Snack attack, mofo. They dig Yahoo! Maps (even show a screenshot), MapQuest, and clearly dig Google Maps.
SNL Parody – Chronicles of Narnia
Via Frankie Milkshoes.
Thanks to Patrick Mineault, Renaun Erickson, Dave Wolf, and Peter Farland.
To get AMFPHP to work with the Flex 2 Alpha, you need to:
The extended NetConnection looks exactly like this:
package { import flash.net.NetConnection; public class NetConnection2 extends NetConnection { public function AppendToGatewayUrl(append:String):Void { } public function AddHeader():Void { } public function ReplaceGatewayUrl():Void { } } }
And some psuedo code for calling your server:
// import the internal classes import flash.net.Responder; import flash.net.NetConnection; import flash.net.ObjectEncoding; // import your custom class import NetConnection2; public var gateway_conn:NetConnection2;
// setup your jazz var gatewayURL:String = "http://server.com/amfphpfolder/gateway.php"; gateway_conn = new NetConnection2(); gateway_conn.objectEncoding = ObjectEncoding.AMF0; gateway_conn.connect(gatewayURL);
// call back functions public function onPingResult(event:Object):Void { // success! } public function onPingResult(fault:Object):Void { // loop through fault object }
// make a method call on // a PHP class var r:Responder = new Responder(onPingResult, onPingStatus); gateway_conn.call("YourPHPClass.theMethod", r);
You can pass as many parameters you want starting from the 3rd parameter, on.
Bad news is, mx.remoting.RecordSet converted recordsets for you in Flash MX 2004 & Flash 8. Since that class doesn’t exist in Flex 2, you can either wait for Adobe to do it, do it yourself, or convert plain arrays to meaningful data.
Remoting with strong-typing… mmmmmm…
Even though there is no such thing as Web 2.0, this is still the best comparison I’ve seen. That so made my day… I fell out of my chair laughing. I love the interweb.
How to tell the difference between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0
Via The Roman Empire.
Flex was made for true software developers. I apparently am not the target market of said demographic, or have yet to see the benefit of casting off the usage of clicking graphical buttons.
Suffice it to say, there isn’t a symbol to right click on with an “Export SWC…” in the context menu like in Flash. Since Yahoo! Maps was created this way, however, it must still be good, right?
A program called “compc.exe” creats SWC’s in Flex. You point it at an MXML or AS file, tell it where your classes root folder is, and tell it what to name the the SWC file. There are a lot more parameters you can use the docs, but those main 3 are all you need to create SWC’s.
SWC’s are basically .zip files that contain your packaged component, and potentially other assets. They are what jar files are to Java. They can contain non-graphical, compiled assets for portable class libraries, or even images that your component needs to draw itself.
They are really nice in Flex because you deploy with your app, greatly simplifying the amount of files in your project. Additionally, you can deploy them on the server so all applications on your Flex server compile with the same SWC.
Since I was constantly testing a component recently, I had to keep remaking the SWC. Here’s a simple script you can paste into Notepad, and save as a .bat file on Windows. Then, all you have to do is double-click the file, and it’ll recompile the SWC for you.
cd c:\program files\macromedia\flex\bin
compc -o "C:\mypath\my.swc" "c:\mypath\mymain.as" -root "c:\mypath\"
Ensure there is a carriage return after the “bin” so the compc part appears on it’s own line.
You can obviously automate this in other build tools like ANT.