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Foundation ActionScript 3 Animation: Making Things Move!

Foundation ActionScript 3 Animation: Making Things Move!

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Author: K Peters
Publisher: FRIENDS OF ED
Category: Book

List Price: £27.99
Buy New: £18.48
You Save: £9.51 (34%)



Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 17189

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 568
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.9 x 1.3

ISBN: 1590597915
Dewey Decimal Number: 006.78
EAN: 9781590597910
ASIN: 1590597915

Publication Date: April 4, 2007
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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  • Foundation Actionscript 3.0 with Flash CS3 and Flex (Foundation)

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Solid Guide to Actionscript 3.0 Motion/Physics Concepts   August 26, 2008
A brilliant book that has remained a solid reference for many of my flash projects. The code can get a little complicated in later chapters, but the book covers all the base concepts in the first few sections.

Highly recommended for beginners/intermediate scripters, or for people who are having a hard time moving from AS2 to AS3.



5 out of 5 stars The best book on Actionscript that i have read   May 25, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I have read a few books on Actionscript and i must say that this book is top of my list. Keith Peters does very well in explaining every example, which makes this book a lot of fun to read. There is a lot of practical examples to get stuck into, which i think is very important when learning actionscript! Also be prepared to learn a lot on trigonometry and Math!! which i must say isn't as hard as i thought. Enjoy!


4 out of 5 stars Great book   February 28, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is great for all actionscript developers. The examples are specific to AS3 but most could be refactored into AS2 examples easily. The object oriented coding is clean, although not always encapsulated well. The book is clear and easy to follow. It explains most concepts very well. It is full of examples and covers basic to advanced physics.

I would recommend this book to anyone wanting to brush up on game physics.



5 out of 5 stars What a brilliant book !!!   December 20, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'm fairly new to Flash and wanted to dip my toe in Actionscript 3.0 to see what cool stuff I could learn. I was actually very apprehensive about doing this as my background is more graphics & web design rather "programming / scripting". However this book is fabulous. It has just about every cool thing you would want to do in flash, and completely liberates you from the rather limiting and dull timeline based animations. The book is extremely readable and very clearly explained. Keith Peters really does hold your hand all the way through it, and gradually builds up examples from basics into really jaw dropping effects, (and there are so many effects effects covered in this book). I thoroughly recommend this book for beginner & intermediate Actionscripters, you will be amazed at what you can achieve. Don't be scared, its great!


5 out of 5 stars Informative and Inspiring   October 21, 2007
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

"Foundation ActionScript 3.0 Animation: Making Things Move" is a new edition of Keith Peters' "Foundation ActionScript Animation". The main difference, implicit in the title, is that the code in the new edition has been updated to use ActionScript 3 in Adobe Flash CS3 Professional.

If you're familiar with Keith Peters and the tutorials on his bit-101 blog, you'll have some idea of the kinds of things covered in this book. Creating animation with ActionScript is all about math, and this book dives right in. Peters' writing style is clean and direct. Even if you're not comfortable with math, difficult concepts are explained clearly and simply. I already have other books on my shelf devoted just to physics and trigonometry, but "Making Things Move" comes very close to replacing those altogether by with its effective explanations of the concepts behind the code.

After the introductory chapters, which include an AS3 primer (more on that below), Peters begins by covering the most basic type of animation. Subsequent chapters build on the foundation created by the previous chapters. As new concepts and formulas are introduced, what started out as a simple ball moving across the screen becomes something much more sophisticated. In a relatively short period of time, you'll have multiple objects zipping around the stage, colliding and interacting with one another. Seeing those basic elements repeated and tweaked helps reinforce what you learned earlier on.

This edition follows the same well-structured format as the previous edition. Each chapter covers just the right amount of material, so you never feel like you're taking in too much at a time. Like any good book on programming, it encourages and rewards a leisurely pace. Simply running the sample code to see what it does before moving on to the next section will teach you something, but it won't exhaust what you can get out of this book. Peters points out where you can experiment with the code, suggesting values that you can change to see what effect it has on the animation. Playing around with the sample code will deepen your understanding of what's happening, so it's worth taking your time.

As I mentioned earlier, the book opens with a short primer on ActionScript 3.0. If you're at all familiar with Object-Oriented Programming in ActionScript 2, the primer does a nice job of bringing you sufficiently up-to-date with what's new/different in AS3 to help you get the most out of the book. If you've never done any OOP with ActionScript before, the chapter provides enough information to get you going, and you can use the framework Peters provides and concentrate on the animation.

(If you are familiar with AS2, and don't see yourself making the jump to AS3 in the very near future, I'd recommend that you buy this book instead of the version specifically for AS2. The principles are the same, and the code can be ported to AS2. Plus, when you finally do start working with AS3, you'll be ready to go.)

Besides what you'll learn directly, this book is valuable for the ideas and inspiration it provides. I didn't get very far into the book before I was adapting the code to work in my own projects, and also thinking of games and user interface elements that I could build around some of the concepts in the book. Just one such idea can repay your investment of time and money. All in all, if you have any interest in using ActionScript for animation, this book belongs in your library.


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