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Hello. I would like to press a button from an Adobe AIR application and execute some installed program. For example, I would have a button named "Start Winamp". When this is pressed it should start Winamp.exe directly...I don't want some command line thing executed, I only want an exe to start. Or...is it the same thing ? Please, let me know if this is possible.

Thank you.

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No offense, but it's been asked. – le dorfier Mar 23 at 2:30
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@Le dorfier, Where? I think this is the first asking of this question. – yar Jul 20 at 10:16

7 Answers

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There's no direct way of doing it. Try CommandProxy.

Read the blog post very carefully. You really need to create two different projects: a native OS executable and an AIR app. The native executable fires up your AIR application. The AIR application in turn requests for the executable to process OS-level requests.

Download the source from Google Code and create two projects -- a Visual Studio/Mono for the sample C# exe and another -- for the AIR application. Here is a link that describes how to set up the former.

In your AIR app's main MXML file, you need to do the following:

  • Create a CommandProxy object, add a few event listeners, for connection detection, and Command response and error.

  • Connect to the native exe via a connect call

  • In the event handler for connect, create a new Command e.g. ScreenshotCommand and execute it (via CommandProxy.execute method)

... and that's it!

Hope this helps.

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I really don't know how to make it work. Do you have a working example ? Thnks – Manny Calavera Mar 25 at 21:23
CommandProxy? What issues are you facing? I don't have anything ready, but can give it a try later tomorrow. – dirkgently Mar 25 at 21:25
I just don't know how to...start the whole thing...what files to use..how to compile properly. I really need an example of something from AIR sending a command like "calc" on Windows. Thnank you! – Manny Calavera Mar 25 at 22:55
Update my post. Let me know if you have more questions. – dirkgently Mar 26 at 3:11
This is nice. Now we're talking. Is there any chance that I may press a button from AIR and trigger the OS command ? :-s Thank you !! – Manny Calavera Mar 26 at 3:26
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See this blog post: Run an exe file from AIR

Short summary:

"If you really need to run external exe files, and there is no other way of solving your problem, then you will make sure that the user runs that another software before launching the AIR application."

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Right now, there's no way to do this natively with AIR. There are some options, though:

  • Shu
  • Red5 running on localhost
  • Create a service that runs on the user's machine and connect to it using sockets.
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The answer comes in two parts. One, if you really MUST run a .exe file, the only way to go is to use a command proxy. Personally, using one in .Net/Mono is a bit overblown. I don't know Mono, but asking your users to install .Net and AIR would scare just about all of them away. Plus, if I was going to ask users to install Mono, why not just write the UI in Mono and be done with it...?

You could write a simple command proxy in Ruby which really would be cross-platform and low hassle in about 5 minutes (I just did it, if you want the code comment me here and I'll post it). If you want control of the process after it's launched, it's a more serious endeavor. For distribution, etc., I believe that Ruby would be easier.

On the other hand, check this idea out. Jeff suggests using a URL request from AIR. Basically, if your browser would interpret it correctly, you're ready to go. The code looks like this

var request : URLRequest = new URLRequest('C:\\playlists\\test.m3u');

I think that, with a bit of creativity (with Mime types, particularly), this second solution might even work for Winamp (e.g.., a playlist or something).

Good luck and thank you for the question, which is probably a dupe but Google only found this one so you've won :)

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I think FluorineFx does what you want: http://aperture.fluorinefx.com/?p=5

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Have a look at Merapi: http://www.merapiproject.net/.

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AIR 2.0 will have this capability.

It's expected to come out in beta by year end (2009) and ship first half of 2010.

http://blogs.adobe.com/air/2009/10/previewing_adobe_air_2_at_adob.html

Native process API Beginning with AIR 2, developers will have access to a native process API that will enable applications to invoke and communicate with native applications on the local machine. In order to preserve the cross platform nature of the .air file format, applications that take advantage of the native process API must be deployed as native installers such as .exe and .dmg. The AIR runtime SDK will include support for generating basic native installers.

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