Ipower web hosting - Using movie clips as masks You can use
Using movie clips as masks You can use a movie clip as a mask to create a hole through which the contents of another movie clip are visible. The mask movie clip plays all the frames in its Timeline, just like a regular movie clip. You can make the mask movie clip draggable, animate it along a motion guide, use separate shapes within a single mask, or resize a mask dynamically. You can also use ActionScript to turn a mask on and off. You cannot use a mask to mask another mask. You cannot set the _alpha property of a mask movie clip. Only fills are used in a movie clip that is used as a mask; strokes are ignored. To create a mask: 1 On the Stage, select a movie clip to be masked. 2 In the Property inspector, enter an instance name for the movie clip, such as image. 3 Create a movie clip to be a mask. Give it an instance name in the Property inspector, such as mask. The masked movie clip will be revealed under all opaque (nontransparent) areas of the movie clip acting as the mask. 4 Select Frame 1 in the Timeline. 5 Open the Actions panel (Window > Development Panels > Actions) if it isn t already open. 6 In the Actions panel, enter the following code: image.setMask(mask); For detailed information, see MovieClip.setMask() on page 533. About masking device fonts You can use a movie clip to mask text that is set in a device font. In order for a movie clip mask on a device font to work properly, the user must have Flash Player 6 release 40 or later. When you use a movie clip to mask text set in a device font, the rectangular bounding box of the mask is used as the masking shape. That is, if you create a nonrectangular movie clip mask for device font text in the Flash authoring environment, the mask that appears in the SWF file will be the shape of the rectangular bounding box of the mask, not the shape of the mask itself. You can mask device fonts only by using a movie clip as a mask. You cannot mask device fonts by using a mask layer on the Stage. Handling movie clip events Movie clips can respond to user events, such as mouse clicks and keypresses, as well as system-level events, such as the initial loading of a movie clip on the Stage. ActionScript provides two ways to handle movie clip events: through event handler methods and through onClipEvent() and on() event handlers. For more information, see Chapter 4, Handling Events, on page 83. 132 Chapter 7: Working with Movie Clips
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