MovieClip(mcName).play();
MovieClip(mcName).addEventListener(??????, myStopFunction);
Or how differently you can learn about the end of play?
MovieClip is an external file and loaded into the swf as needed.
Use two properties all MovieClips have:
totalFrames - currentFrame
http://livedocs.adobe.com/flash/9.0/ActionScriptLangRefV3/flash/display/MovieClip.html#currentFrame
http://livedocs.adobe.com/flash/9.0/ActionScriptLangRefV3/flash/display/MovieClip.html#totalFrames
When I have a custom animation and want to know when finishes I use to dispatch a custom event from the last frame of the animation. Usually an Event.COMPLETE will do.
In the last frame of the myAnimation MovieClip I do:
this.dispatchEvent(new Event(Event.COMPLETE));
stop();
Then in the main code I listen add listener to that evnet:
myAnimation.addEventListener(Event.COMPLETE, animationEndHandler);
Almost like @daniel.sedlacek answer, but without timeline code :
var mc : MovieClip = new $TestMovieClip();
mc.addEventListener(Event.COMPLETE, function() : void {
trace("COMPLETE");
});
mc.addFrameScript(mc.totalFrames-1, function() : void {
mc.dispatchEvent(new Event(Event.COMPLETE));
});
mc.play();
Only check currentFrame
and totalFrames
is not enough for a MovieClip that has multiple scenes. You must also check if it is at the last scene.
function isAtLastFrame(mc:MovieClip):Boolean
{
return currentScene.name == mc.scenes[mc.scenes.length - 1].name && currentFrame == currentScene.numFrames;
}