2
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.

0

4 Answers 4

3

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

1
  • What you need. Thank you very much
    – user499596
    Nov 8, 2010 at 5:58
2

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);
1

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();
0

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;
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.