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LinkBack | Outils de la discussion |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Hébergeur: |
I have Adobe Flash CS3 and have embedded a Flash file. It does not show up, and
GoDaddy tells me that .fla files are not automatically supported... .sfw files are. And they won't do anything themselfs to fix it. I don't even see a way to save my flash files as .swf (admiteddetly I am a newbie)... but I am sure the flash file is functional. Any suggestions on what I can do? I have a school project due tonight which relies on my having a flash file embedded. Am I screwed? Thanks |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
..fla files are the authoring files. You can create, edit, and change
everything about them. .swf files are the finished animation output, what the user will load on their computer. They can't be edited, they're a finished product. You need to publish your .fla file into a .swf. You can find the publishing command and options under the file menu. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
Hi
In short YES, if you want the whole world to download your .fla then leave it on the server. Flash comes with a handy but not very friendly way of publishiing your site, ie Publish Settings What this does is create an html wrapper for your .SWF, which by the way is created whenever you run your movie inside the Flash IDE. Upload your .swf and html renamed to index.html if this is your default homepage to your server. Remove the .fla from the server - Problem Solved. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
Motleyscrew,
> I have Adobe Flash CS3 and have embedded a Flash file. It does > not show up, and GoDaddy tells me that .fla files are not > automatically supported... .sfw files are. That makes good sense, actually, because FLA files are your source files -- they shouldn't be on the server. SWF files are the only thing you need to upload and embed in your HTML documents. > And they won't do anything themselfs to fix it. An analogy might be useful here. Imagine you're using Photoshop to create graphics for your website. You wouldn't upload the PSD files when finished; instead, you'd save your PSD files as JPGs, or GIFs, or maybe PNGs. Same idea for Flash. > I don't even see a way to save my flash files as .swf (admiteddetly > I am a newbie)... but I am sure the flash file is functional. Control > Test Movie does it -- that's the approach I usually use -- but you can also select File > Publish or File > Publish Preview > Flash. > I have a school project due tonight which relies on my > having a flash file embedded. Am I screwed? Hardly. You just need to publish that SWF file. ![]() David Stiller Co-author, Foundation Flash CS3 for Designers http://tinyurl.com/2k29mj "Luck is the residue of good design." |
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