Darn! I usually catch my stupidity before I send out the email.
Pretend I never said anything.
ben
Mick G wrote:
I've always wondered why there is no option to omit comments when
publishing
a SWF. We all try comment our code as much as possible and at times it
can
double (or more) the
Hi,
I don't think the comments are included in the swf.
greetz
JC
On 1/25/07, ben gomez farrell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
U.I could be wrong, but doesn't omit trace actions in the
publish settings do this?
ben
Mick G wrote:
I've always wondered why there is no option to omit
comments arent compiled. dont worry about it. :)
Mick G wrote:
Am I wrong in thinking that comments are included in a SWF when it's
published?
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When you decompile a SWF, you can see the comments right?
On 1/25/07, Hans Wichman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I don't think the comments are included in the swf.
greetz
JC
On 1/25/07, ben gomez farrell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
U.I could be wrong, but doesn't omit trace actions
OK - thanks for clarification, I must be going a little mad :)
On 1/25/07, Martin Wood-Mitrovski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
comments arent compiled. dont worry about it. :)
Mick G wrote:
Am I wrong in thinking that comments are included in a SWF when it's
published?
Am I wrong in thinking that comments are included in a SWF when it's
published?
Yes. Comments are not published in the SWF.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mick G
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2007 2:15 PM
To: Flashcoders mailing list
Comments are not compiled. If you decompile a swf with commented code,
you will not see the comments. If you have tons of comments in your
code, you may need to improve your coding practices and naming
conventions.
___
Flashcoders@chattyfig.figleaf.com
Mick G wrote:
I've always wondered why there is no option to omit comments when
publishing
a SWF. We all try comment our code as much as possible and at times it can
double (or more) the number of lines of code in an application.
This would especially make sense when using other people's
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