don't you mean iiAsc?
Like Ascii but with endianness...
Karl DeSaulniers wrote:
Heh, yeah maybe we can invent a AS-C from learning it. lol
Karl
On Apr 13, 2010, at 3:44 AM, Carl Welch wrote:
After all this discussion, I've decided to suck it up and give these a
read:
http://developer.app
The programs on my CDs were written in C++. They make fast, powerful,
use of graphics but took a very long time to write.
The code in AS3 and C++ isn't that dissimilar. Learning the language
isn't the problem.
Bringing assets to the screen is difficult in C++. AS3 enables me to do
that much
01010100 01101000 0111 01110100 0010 01101001 01110011 0010
01110100 01101000 01100101 0010 01101001 01100100 01100101 0111
00101110 00101110 00101110
[I'm not that mean: http://home2.paulschou.net/tools/xlate/ ]
;)
On 12-04-2010 16:57, Juan Pablo Califano wrote:
IMHO, I don't think people have an issue with the correct methodology of
making apps - if that were the case we might still be in the dark ages
of development. Flash gave and still gives a lot of people the power to
develop ideas for programs quickly, without having to wade through
rubbish lik
Well said Lee Brimelow.
Apple wielding the knife like this makes them look
angry, isolated and desperate.
John
allandt bik-elliott (thefieldcomic.com) wrote:
thanks lee brimelow for this amazing post
http://theflashblog.com/?p=1888
___
Flashcode
Dave Watts wrote:
...AS3, Java and C# is different from ... C++ in many ways - primarily
because you don't manage
memory directly in the first three, I think.
Yeah, you don't think that you need to manage memory in those. But you
do. Just not as often.
_
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