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AS3, like many OOP languages, contains many optimization techniques, that may be unheard of to inexperience users. These can range from micro-macro coding difference, to file structures. To help the less experienced ones : What are the tips worth knowing, that will enrich an AS3 programmer.

The core idea : Is to introduce optimization methods to newer programmers who may know the basics. But not the various techniques of 'seasoned' programmers (Especially within loops).

Since most as3 programmer, will use either flash or flex, programming tips involving them are naturally welcomed too.

Also please limit each answer to one tip, so the best ones will naturally float to the top =)

However : AS3, being a "compile language" does much optimization on its own, so for the new guys, that work too hard on following the tips. Learn from it, not be a slave to it. The first step is always to "complete the app".

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  • 1
    Sound like: "Let's compile all the wisdom and lore of Flash platform craftsmanship on one page!" Jul 11, 2011 at 9:15

14 Answers 14

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If you're serious into game programming : evolve your hierarchy, don't use deep hierarchies, teach yourself entity/component architecture (agregation/composition vs inheritance), dig into PushButton Engine source code.

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Another optimization on advanced game programming: use bitmap blitting techniques (setPixels, BitmapData, as opposed to MovieClip/Sprites) like described here : http://mikegrundvig.blogspot.com/2007/05/copypixel-is-faster-then-sprites.html. Dig into Flixel source code.

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  • blitting is essential for flash gaming, especially on mobile. Jul 11, 2011 at 10:25
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Be provident, when creating objects. Reuse miscelaneous objects, when possible.

Better said: reuse what you can, but reusing misc objects is easy to start with.

This saves a lot of work for garbage collector and thus affects overall performance of your application. This way you will also save time that would be otherwise lost on creating redundant instances.

These efforts are not always necessary, but, the more intense your app activities are, the more valuable are the following techniques.

Several tips below illustrate this idea on matrices, points, arrays, dictionaries, ...rest, filters, color transforms.

Tip 1: matrices.

// DO: reusing a matrix.

private static const MATRIX:Matrix = new Matrix();
// <...>
var bmp:BitmapData = new BitmapData(width, height, true, 0);
MATRIX.identity();
MATRIX.scale(0.5, 0.5);
bmp.draw(source, MATRIX);

// DON'T
var bmp:BitmapData = new BitmapData(width, height, true, 0);
var matrix:Matrix = new Matrix();
matrix.scale(0.5, 0.5);
bmp.draw(source, matrix);

Tip 2: points.

// DO: reusing a point.

private static const ZERO_POINT:Point = new Point();
// <...>
var thresholdTest:BitmapData = new BitmapData(bmp.width, bmp.height, true, 0);
thresholdTest.threshold(bmp, bmp.rect, ZERO_POINT, ">", 0x10000000, 0xFFFF0000, 0xFF000000);

// DON'T

var thresholdTest:BitmapData = new BitmapData(bmp.width, bmp.height, true, 0);
thresholdTest.threshold(bmp, bmp.rect, new Point(), ">", 0x10000000, 0xFFFF0000, 0xFF000000);

Tip 3: avoid heavily using methods, that create redundant instances for you, unless it's absolutely necessary and convenient. Or at least reduce usage of such methods to single calls during you app session.

  • localToGlobal() and globalToLocal(): try to figure whether you can calculate coordinates by yourself. Otherwise, Point instance is created on each call.
  • getRect() and getBounds(): see if you can structure your display list in a way that you don't need detect complicated displacements. Otherwise, Rectangle instance is created on each call.
  • ...rest:Array: obviously on each method call this creates an array that is being disposed of on method return. Is this absolutely necessary? May be you can use array created outside of the method and reuse it each time (see next tip)?

Tip 4: when possible, create single Array or Dictionary instances when you are only using them as containers for generating some results in a method.

// DO: reuse array that holds results

public function generateMeSomeResults(results:Array):void
{
    results.length = 0;
    // <...>
    // fill results array with what you need
    // and reuse this reference next time
}

// DON'T

public function generateMeSomeResults():Array
{
    var results:Array = [];
    // <...>
    return results;
}

Tip 5: don't create new array and new filter object each time you want to change someDisplayObject.filters. This is especially important if you animate filters and they have changes in each frame.

// DO: reuse filters array and filter objects

private static const EMPTY_FILTERS:Array = [];
private static const GLOW:GlowFilter = new GlowFilter(0xFF0000, 1, 12, 12);
private static const HOVER_FILTERS:Array = [GLOW];

private function onRollOver(event:MouseEvent):void
{
    // it's Ok to change constant here
    // because once filters property is set,
    // you are free to change filter object: it will not affect
    // filters that were set before.
    GLOW.color = 0xFF0000+Math.random()*0xFF00;
    this.filters = HOVER_FILTERS;
}

private function onRollOut(event:MouseEvent):void
{
    this.filters = EMPTY_FILTERS;
}

// DON'T

private function onRollOver(event:MouseEvent):void
{
    this.filters = [new GlowFilter(0xFF0000, 1, 12, 12)];
}

private function onRollOut(event:MouseEvent):void
{
    this.filters = [];
}

One more important thing to note: DisplayObject.filters a getter/setter. When you get DisplayObject.filters value, you effectively create a new object which is not what you want. Hence, reusing an array of filters is a good idea: you have but one instance all the time.

Tip 6: the same Tip 5 goes for ColorTransform objects. You don't need a separate ColorTransform instance for each change of a display object's tint. Once you set DisplayObject.transform.colorTransform = someColorTransform;, you can change your someColorTransform object freely: it will not affect already applied color transforms.

Like in the case with filters, this property is a getter/setter. When you get DisplayObject.transform.colorTransform value, you effectively create a new object which is not what you want. See the test below.

import flash.geom.ColorTransform;

var test1:ColorTransform = transform.colorTransform;
var test2:ColorTransform = transform.colorTransform;
trace(test1 == test2); // always false. this object gets created each time on access.
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  • If possible =) Please split the 5 tips up individually. Including the reuse tip XD Jul 11, 2011 at 12:20
  • 2
    All of these tips illustrate resuing of miscellaneous objects. Jul 11, 2011 at 12:26
  • AS3 objects are expensive it seems :p
    – gosukiwi
    Oct 12, 2013 at 18:51
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Use vectors instead of arrays when possible. It has ~60% performance improvement over Array.

Vectors are arrays with variable type and/or array length limitations.

http://www.mikechambers.com/blog/2008/08/19/using-vectors-in-actionscript-3-and-flash-player-10/

Generally though, don't bother with optimizing everything, optimize only when and what you need to optimize, if you optimize 3% of your code that accounts for 95% of your performance, you have achieved a similar level of performance to optimizing 100% of code at 3% of time spent or 33 times less time overall...

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    typesation is the key here, while the Array doesn't actually hint about it's containings, a nicely choosed Vector class will do a miracles with code reading. :) Jul 11, 2011 at 10:39
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Use [] and new Object(), instead of, new Array() and {}. It is at best 3 times faster. And is extremely common for the more costly operation to occur in loops.

Generally speaking, the new keyword is just plain expensive.

EDIT: Updated to reflect the change : Surprise surprise, it seems that the updated version of flash, has drastically improved the performance of "new Object();" statement. This seems to apply to CS5 and above. Cause the test i did in CS4 showed the other way. [of {} being better then new Object() ]

Anyway for those who want to see it themselves

import flash.utils.getTimer;

public var _time:Number;
public var _simpleArrayTime:Number;
public var buffer:Array;
public function testArray():void
{
    trace( "----------------Array Test--------------");
    _time = getTimer();
    for ( var a:int = 0; a < 100000; a++ )
        buffer = [];
    _simpleArrayTime = getTimer() - _time;
    trace( "[] * 100000 :"+_simpleArrayTime.toPrecision(21) );

    _time = getTimer();
    for ( var b:int = 0; b < 100000; b++ )
        buffer = new Array();
    _simpleArrayTime = getTimer() - _time;
    trace( "new Array() * 100000 :"+_simpleArrayTime.toPrecision(21) );

    _time = getTimer();
    for ( var c:int = 0; c < 100000; c++ )
        buffer = [];
    _simpleArrayTime = getTimer() - _time;
    trace( "[] * 100000 :"+_simpleArrayTime.toPrecision(21) );
}

public var objBuffer:Object;
public function testObject():void
{
    trace( "----------------Object Test--------------");
    _time = getTimer();
    for ( var a:int = 0; a < 100000; a++ )
        objBuffer = {};
    _simpleArrayTime = getTimer() - _time;
    trace( "{} * 100000 :"+_simpleArrayTime.toPrecision(21) );

    _time = getTimer();
    for ( var b:int = 0; b < 100000; b++ )
        objBuffer = new Object();
    _simpleArrayTime = getTimer() - _time;
    trace( "new Object() * 100000 :"+_simpleArrayTime.toPrecision(21) );

    _time = getTimer();
    for ( var c:int = 0; c < 100000; c++ )
        objBuffer = {};
    _simpleArrayTime = getTimer() - _time;
    trace( "{} * 100000 :"+_simpleArrayTime.toPrecision(21) );
}

public function runTests(event:Event = null):void
{
    testArray();
    testObject();
}

And the following are my reasults

----------------Array Test--------------
[] * 100000 :82.0000000000000000000
new Array() * 100000 :152.000000000000000000
[] * 100000 :53.0000000000000000000
----------------Object Test--------------
{} * 100000 :53.0000000000000000000
new Object() * 100000 :36.0000000000000000000
{} * 100000 :53.0000000000000000000
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    You need to back that statement up. For instance, in my tests, I found that you are correct about Array. The difference is about 3x. BUT, the same is not true about Object. In fact, {} was about 1.6x more expensive than new Object(). This is the opposite of what you are suggesting. I need to research why this is, but are you suggesting that new is not happening with [] or {}? If so, what IS happening? Jul 11, 2011 at 10:22
  • wait, what? how is that 3 times faster? it's the same thing but different syntax. if it's true that would be very interesting and something good to know, but can you supply sources for this? Jul 11, 2011 at 10:23
  • O My ! This statements kills me .. i am gonna rewrite now a few parts of my code. thanks :) Jul 11, 2011 at 10:27
  • @Brian Genisio, hmm... surprise surprise, seems like CS5 did make new Object() better. I have updated the question to reflect the changing with the times (haha)... And, i am suggesting the new statement is costly in general. Not only for array or objects =) Jul 11, 2011 at 10:56
  • @TheDarkIn1978 Added a test code to test with your own eyes, haha. Seems like i was outdated with the object though (updated answer) Jul 11, 2011 at 10:57
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When you need several copies of an image displayed on one screen, don't create multiple BitmapDatas: use a single BitmapData instance and just pass its reference to separate Bitmap objects.

import flash.display.BitmapData;
import flash.display.BitmapDataChannel;
import flash.display.Bitmap;

// create one image
var bmp:BitmapData = new BitmapData(100, 100, true, 0);
bmp.perlinNoise(36, 36, 3, 100, false, false, BitmapDataChannel.BLUE|BitmapDataChannel.GREEN);

// *** display the same image multiple times ***

var test1:Bitmap = new Bitmap(bmp);
test1.x = 0;
test1.y = 0;
addChild(test1);

var test2:Bitmap = new Bitmap(bmp);
test2.x = 30;
test2.y = 30;
addChild(test2);

var test3:Bitmap = new Bitmap(bmp);
test3.x = 60;
test3.y = 60;
addChild(test3);

It may be especially useful, when you are loading an external assets library (an SWF) and get BitmapData items by applicationDomain.getDefinition() and new. Caching what you get may prove very useful.

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  • speaking of BitmapData, there's also a specific dispose() method for BitmapData objects which should be called before nullifying/cleaning up Bitmap/BitmapData objects. Jul 11, 2011 at 13:18
  • But you have to be absolutely sure you don't need this BitmapData instance anywhere in your app. If it's being displayed by several Bitmap instances, calling dispose() will kill all of the visuals being displayed. Jul 11, 2011 at 13:53
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Teach yourself bitwise operations. Use it in your main rendering loop, bitmap or audio processing, and learn to keep a programmer-friendly code by NOT using it when it's not needed (that's the difficult part).

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  • Alternatively, use it, but use a comment above containing the non-bitwise operation version. So that it can be read instead. =) Jul 11, 2011 at 9:43
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there is, of course, the new StageVideo class since Flash Player 10.2 which is much more performant than rendering with the traditional Video object.

Adobe MAX 2010 Stage Video Preview (video)

Getting Started With Stage Video (tutorial)

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Objects instantiation is expensive. Use object pooling for objects creation/destruction needs in critical code (rendering, game loop). You can find an efficient out-of-the-box library here : http://lab.polygonal.de/2008/06/18/using-object-pools/

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  • In early versions of the Flex Framework, it is not uncommon to destroy and create objects as needed. The drop down of the ComboBox is one example. I assume this was done because freeing the memory was decided to be more important than the cost of instantiation. Jul 11, 2011 at 12:29
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The usual EventDispatcher used massively in the Flash Platform API has a cost: instantiating several objects, usually inheriting Event type.

The signal-and-slots pattern is a reliable replacement, well-known (see Boost::Signals, Qt), and will result in a huge performance gain, benchmarks here, enjoy.

TurboSignals and as3-signal are reliable out-of-the-box implementations. I consider as3-signals as production-ready and use it in my day job.

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Split up your app as much as you can!

Split up all functionality into classes, sub-classes, etc. Avoid cluttering the MXML include script / initializing script with code, keeping it to a minimum. It will help in the not-so-long run, especially on bigger RIA projects, when you app plans may change. It also makes changes easier, by swapping classes, and running search-replace.

While making your code easier to understand, to yourself in the future, or others.

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  • Are you quoting something? If so, can you specify the source? I consider splitting things up to be a good decision for long term maintenance of the code; however I don't believe it is always the best decision for code performance or 'time to market' issues. Jul 11, 2011 at 12:34
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If you're coding with the Flex Ffamework, be sure to memorize the Flex Component LifeCycle and make use of it when building your own components. Here is info on the MX Lifecycle and the Spark Lifecycle.

The lifecycle makes use of the render events of the Flash Player and you save time and performance by grouping similar changes into a single place in your code.

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Learn about how the Flash Player balances rendering events on screen with execution code behind those events. The approach is sometimes referred to as the Elastic Racetrack. Here are some relevant links describing how it works:

http://ted.onflash.org/2005/07/flash-player-mental-model-elastic.php

http://www.craftymind.com/2008/04/18/updated-elastic-racetrack-for-flash-9-and-avm2/

http://ted.onflash.org/2008/04/flash-player-mental-model-elastic.php

Once you know how this works, you can use it to optimize your code

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When optimizing Flex projects for mobile devices, be sure to build your custom Skins in ActionScript, not in MXML. Since MXML is turned into AS3 by the Flex Compiler, it is not always the most performance intensive. Building in ActionScript can avoid

Most likely you'll want to extend the MobileSkin class, which includes extra methods that are either helper methods or add additional hooks to standard UIComponent lifecycle methods.

Some of the additional hooks methods:

  • layoutContents()
  • drawBackground()
  • commitCurrentState()

You'd extend these methods to perform your own functionality. layoutContents and drawBackground are called from updateDisplayList. commitCurrentState is called from the set currentState method.

Some of the helper methods include:

  • getElementPreferredHeight()
  • getElementPreferredWidth()
  • setElementSize()
  • setElementPosition()

You wouldn't extend these methods, but just call them as needed.

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