This week I switched from Flash 8 to Flash 9.

Since last year I've been playing with Flash 8, using the Motion-Twin command-line compiler mtasc. I was using it to write a transportation game, and I had something running and was making progress, until Supreme Commander came out. Then I went back to playing games instead of writing them. Although I'd still like to work on that game, I've found that I also want to use Flash to build interactive demonstrations of concepts I describe on my site. For example, in my article about grids I'd like to make those diagrams interactive so that you can better see how the coordinate systems work. Diagrams are now what I'm using to learn Flash; I may go back to the game later (or maybe not).

I like mtasc. However, it only supports Flash 8 (Actionscript 2), and is not going to be updated for Flash 9 (Actionscript 3). It's a dead end. Flash 9 is not only significantly faster (almost as fast as Java), but it also has major changes to the libraries. Instead of mtasc, you can use HaXe, which is a new language similar to Actionscript/Javascript/ECMAscript. HaXe looks neat (better types, type inference), but it's a different language, not Actionscript. Part of my goal is to publish my source code so that others can use it, and it's less useful to publish code that isn't usable in Actionscript. It's also less useful to publish code that requires an expensive development environment (for example, Flex, at $500). And it's easier to learn a language when there are lots of other users, posting tips. So I've been staying with mtasc; the same code works with both mtasc and the Flash 8 development environment.

Last week Rich Collins pointed me to the free command-line Flash 9 compiler, mxmlc. Wonderful! It's free, it's Flash 9, it's command line—just what I was looking for. I spent a few days learning about Flash 9, and found this tutorial and these tips to be most helpful. My initial thoughts:

  • (yay) Flash 9 has much better libraries than Flash 8. The sprites (movieclips), the event handling, and the graphics commands are all nicer.
  • (boo) Actionscript 3 is more verbose than Actionscript 2, with types, packages, public, override, and other annotations. It's less of a scripting language and more like Java. This is bad.
  • (yay) Flash 9 is much faster than Flash 8, in part thanks to all those type annotations.
  • (boo) The mxmlc compiler is significantly slower than mtasc, in part because it's written in Java, which has a high startup time.
  • (boo) The mxmlc compiler is not open source.

I've been converting some of my code from Flash 8 to Flash 9, and despite the increased verbosity, I've been happy with it. If you want to use Flash 9 with free command-line compiler, start with this tutorial.

Update: [2007-07-28] [2010-03-25] You can download the Flash command-line compiler (Flex mxmlc) for free, without registration, from Adobe. Once I learned the language, the Flash 9 library reference became my #1 source of information.

Labels: , ,

3 comments:

kaolin fire wrote at June 30, 2007 1:28 PM

Thanks for the tech updates! :)

Amit wrote at July 28, 2007 10:49 AM

In one test program, I found that using type annotations everywhere made the program 4 times as fast. Of course this will vary depending on how much your program uses math, graphics, etc.

qubodup wrote at July 28, 2007 4:47 PM

hey, please make sure your pages never get lost on the web, seeya