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Adobe Flash Professional CS3 User Manual

Page 296

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FLASH CS3

User Guide

290

Use an application that supports UTF-8 encoding, such as Dreamweaver, to save the text file in UTF-8 format.

To identify the file as Unicode to the Flash authoring tool, include the following header as the first line of the file:

//!-- UTF8

Note: Include a space after the second dash (-).

By default, the Flash authoring application assumes that external files that use the

#include

action are encoded in

the traditional code page of the operating system running the authoring tool. Using the

//!-- UTF8

header in a file

tells the authoring tool that the external file is encoded as UTF-8.

1

In the Flash authoring tool, create a dynamic or input text field to display the text in the document.

2

In the Property inspector, with the text field selected, assign an instance name to the text field.

3

Outside of Flash, create a text file that defines the value for the text field variable. Add the

//!-- UTF8

header at

the beginning of the file.

4

Save the text file in UTF-8 format.

5

To include the external file in the dynamic or input text field, use the

#include

directive. For more information,

see

#include

directive in the ActionScript 2.0 Language Reference.

See also

“Working with text” on page 261

Creating multilanguage documents by using text variables

To include Unicode-encoded contents in text variables, use the syntax

\uXXXX

, where

XXXX

is the four-digit

hexadecimal code point, or escape character, for the Unicode character. The Flash authoring tool supports Unicode
escape characters through

\uFFFF

. To find the code points for Unicode characters, see the Unicode Standard at

Unicode.org.

You can use Unicode escape characters only in text field variables. You cannot include Unicode escape characters in
external text or XML files; Flash Player 6 does not recognize Unicode escape characters in external files.

For example, to set a dynamic text field (with the

myTextVar

instance name) that contains Japanese, Korean,

Chinese, English, and Greek characters and the Euro sign, enter the following:

myTextVar.text = "\u304B\uD55C\u6C49hello\u03BB\u20AC";

When the SWF file plays, the following characters appear in the text field:

For best results when creating a text field that contains multiple languages, use a font that includes all the glyphs your
text needs.

See also

“Non-Unicode external files” on page 280