XFL is the new uncompressed ADOBE FLASH (CS5) source file, it consists from XML definitions, most of them are clear but unfortunately, the important one are strange.

Looking to various existing sources, I can see shape's EDGE definitions like:

<Edge strokeStyle="1" edges="!0 0S4|180 0"/>
<Edge strokeStyle="1" edges="!2720 2720S6|0 2720!0 2720|0 0!0 0/2720 2720"/>
<Edge fillStyle1="1" edges="!3532 1539.5S2[#BD9.4D #577.3C 2952.5 1756.5!2952.5 1756.5[#AF6.DA #4C6.1D 3584 1119!3584 1119|3532 1539.5"/> 

Doing some tests I can say, that:

! == move to position
| == draw line from the position to the new position
/ == probably same like |
[ == draw curve
( == probably same like [

But what means the values like S4 or #BD9.4D? My not proved yet guess is, that the # values could be somehow encoded very small numbers. I have no clue what could be the S4.

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!(x,y) moveTo

/(x,y)+ lineTo

|(x,y)+ lineTo

[(x1 y1 ex ey)+ curveTo (quadratic)

](x1 y1 ex ey)+ curveTo (quadratic)

((pBCPx pBCPy)? ; x1 y1 x2 y2 ex ey (({Q,q,P,p})? x y)+ curveTo (cubic start)

)(nBCPx nBCPy)? ; curveTo (cubic end)

Sn selection (n=bitmask, 1:fillStyle0, 2:fillStyle1, 4:stroke)

#aaaaaa.bb is a signed fixed point 32 bit number

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Thanks, just wondering how you know that? :) – Oldes Nov 2 '10 at 14:28
btw.. don't you know what means the cubics values as well? – Oldes Nov 2 '10 at 14:31
i know everything ;) the cubics (as well as the selection flag) are merely hints for the IDE (cubics can only appear in cubics attributes) – Claus Wahlers Nov 2 '10 at 14:43
...though i'm not sure what the semantics of all the parameters are. x1, y1, x2, y2 are probably control points and ex, ey the end anchor, and pBCP/nBCP stands for previous/next Bezier Control Point. Not sure about the rest. – Claus Wahlers Nov 2 '10 at 14:47
And what is the difference between | and / lineTo? – Oldes Nov 17 '10 at 10:11
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Hm... I was wrong with the guess to # values!

I've decompiled the produced shape and can say, that for example value #BD9.4D must be a silly hexadecimal encoding of number 3033.77. I would like to know, why is Adobe using something like that in code which should be human readable?

EDIT: the above is wrong, the correct result for #BD9.4D is 3033.30078125

>> (to integer! #{000BD94D}) / 256
== 3033.30078125

Also note, that numbers like #19F.2 are binary #{00019F20}

According the S4 type of values, they could be just some additional info for the FLASH editor because when I manually remove them, I can load the source and the shape is same.

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they use the weird hex notation for values that cannot be represented as a decimal real number without loss – Claus Wahlers Nov 2 '10 at 12:43
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