Thats my experience too, it doesn't matter what the flashfile does, what computer you run on and that you've closed down all other applications, the frame rate is still crippled.

That sound sync trick sounds interesting, but does it really increase the framerate or does it only skip frames? If so does it run scripts in the scipped frames?

/David

----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael Kønig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <flashcoders@chattyfig.figleaf.com>
Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2006 10:42 PM
Subject: Re: [Flashcoders] Can this be true? (is: framerate ABCs)


I noticed it first when i was testing a tilebased game and noticed the low performance in a browser before sending it to the client.

I started commenting out parts of the script and evtually removing all graphics. Still the same!

I made a whole new BLANK document only containing the script that shows thie framerate. It gave me exactly the same, slow framerate as with the ENTIRE game running.

I have a very good computer and had nothing particular running in the background.

I guess I am just amazed that a swf looses so many frames per second, not from scripts or rendering graphics, but simply from being playing in a bowser. Its just a complet surprise
and I am still wondering if I am doing something wrong...

/Michael



From: John Dowdell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: Flashcoders mailing list <flashcoders@chattyfig.figleaf.com>
To: Flashcoders mailing list <flashcoders@chattyfig.figleaf.com>
Subject: Re: [Flashcoders] Can this be true?  (is: framerate ABCs)
Date: Tue, 02 May 2006 13:16:14 -0700

Michael Kønig wrote:
The movie is set to 30 fps but plays at around 23 and I have a good computer!

That's quite possible. The framerate is a top limit, not a bottom gate. Depending on the content, and what else that computer is being asked to do at that time, and (if playing in a browser) how frequently the particular browser lets its plugins access the processor, you'll see the system work as hard as it can to meet (but not exceed) the framerate you set.

Lots of people set framerates too high... you can see these SWFs start to choke up your computer when playing a dozen or so of them simultaneously in different browser windows... all of them straining to meet the high framerate simultaneously.

It's good to test ambitious work on some low-end machines.

jd





--
John Dowdell . Adobe Developer Support . San Francisco CA USA
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