Adobe Flex

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Definition

“Adobe Flex is a software development kit and an IDE for a group of technologies initially released in March of 2004 by Macromedia to support the development and deployment of cross platform, rich Internet applications based on their proprietary Macromedia Flash platform.”" (Wikipedia, retrieved 15:49, 6 September 2007 (MEST)).

SWF files generated by the Flex SDK require Flash Player 9 or above.

History: In April 2007, Adobe announced that the Flex SDK would be released open source. A visual programming environment was provided in the form of the Flex Builder that was to remain proprietary and commercial. Since october 2007 it is free to students and educators (upon request).

The Adobe Flex software development kit (SDK) supports:

  • MXML, an XML-based user interface markup language.
  • ActionScript 2/3 programming

This is just a short overview article. Basically, with Flex you can write Flash applications just by coding. Roughly speaking, you have to learn how to use the Actionscript 3 classes with ECMAScript and you may use MXML for faster development of the User Interface. So - conceptually speaking - it's Java made easier. The result - of course - is a Flash "swf" (Movie) file. In a short flow formula:

ActionScript + [ MXML ] -> compilation -> Executable flash (swf)

This entry is part of the Flash and ActionScript series of articles.

Installing the free Flex SDK

There exist 2 versions (in Aug 2008), both are free
  • A kit that includes proprietary software
  • A kit that only includes open source and free software
Getting the Flex SDK from Adobe
  • Download this free SDK from Adobe:
http://www.adobe.com/products/flex/flexdownloads/

The Adobe Flex2 Software Development Kit (SDK) is a platform independant compiler that needs Java 6 (or better) installed.

Installing the Adobe Flex2 Software Development Kit (SDK) for Windows
  • Unzip it somewhere, e.g.
c:\soft\flex
  • Edit the Environment variables through the configuration panel to include the flex ./bin directory in the path: I.e. something like Parameters->Configuration Panel->System->Advanced, then select Environment Variables (I don't have an English System at hand). E.g.
%Path%;c:\soft\flex\bin

If you don't know about environment variables, read [[environment variable#Setting_a_value_in_windows environment variable] (setting a value in windows). Do not delete the '%Path%' element if you edit the user Path. Alternatively, if you edit the System path, keep all the existing paths or you will be in deep trouble.

Installing the Adobe Flex2 Software Development Kit (SDK) for Ubuntu
  • Unzip it somewhere (I put it under /usr/local/flex)
  • Under Linux change permissions of the shell scripts in the bin directory, in particular mxmlc
  • Then add this directory to your path. E.g. under my Ubuntu I added in file /etc/bash.bashrc:
export PATH=${PATH}:/usr/local/flex/bin
Installing the Adobe Flex2 Software Development Kit (SDK) for Mac OSX
  • Unzip it somewhere (I put it under /Applications/flex_sdk/flex_sdk2/)
  • Open terminal, go to the flex_sdk directory. Make sure the files in the bin directory have the right permissions. Type "ls-al". File details should start with "-rwx". If no "x" appears, type "chmod u+x *" to give execution permission to all files in that directory.
  • Then add this directory to your system paths. Go to your home directory ("cd $home"), edit the file (in the terminal window, type "open .profile" or "mate .profile" if you haveBut it is not a tutorial !! textmate installed). Add the path to the file.
export PATH=$PATH:/Applications/flex_sdk/flex_sdk_2/bin/

Save the file. Then make sure the profile file is being initiated.

source .profile

If you have the TextMate code editing software installed, download the Flex and AS3 Bundles for TextMate.

Flex Builder

Writing ActionScript / MXML Applications

See:

Editing software / IDEs

Otherwise check out:

  • Flashdevelop. Free and open source tool that provides syntax support and an interface with the Flex compilers.
  • Adobe Flex Builder, a commercial Eclipse plugin from Adobe. It is free for education upon request.
  • ... or use the built-in ActionScript editor in CS3.

Links

(see other entries AS entries for more)

Adobe tutorials

Other