Adobe 65036570 User Guide - Page 19

Understanding the Director metaphor

Page 19 highlights

ADOBE DIRECTOR 11.0 8 User Guide • Exiting and re-entering the tabbed view. Windows®' users can exit the tabbed document mode by clicking the Restore button. Mac® users can use the Break Apart Tabbed Documents option in the Window menu to enter into the untabbed mode, where all the tabs from the tabbed document window are split up into separate windows. To reenter the tabbed mode, Windows users click the maximize box on any document window, and Mac users use the Tab Documents Together option in the Window menu. If the Score and Stage are docked together in the maximized tabbed view, they will continue to be docked even after you exit that mode. • The debugger is now a separate window from the script window. When you open the debugger window and click the Stage in the maximized tabbed view, the debugger window is relocated to the back of the Stage. It can be brought to front by using the shortcut Ctrl+F11 or Cmd+F11. • Collapsing a panel. To collapse a panel, you have to click the title of the panel, unlike in previous versions where clicking on any portion of the title bar collapsed the panel. • MIAWs are not present in tabs and remain as separate document windows like the debugger. Only MIAWS created as tool MIAWS can be docked in the docking channels. • MIAWS behind the Stage can be brought to front using the open() lingo function for MIAWS. Understanding the Director metaphor The Director user interface is designed around a movie metaphor. Each project you create can be thought of as a movie, with a cast of characters, a Score, a Stage where the action takes place, and a director (you, the author). Each media element that appears in your movie (sound, video, images, text, buttons, and so on) can be thought of as a member of the movie's cast. In Director, the Cast window is where you view the list of media elements that appear in your movie. As with a real movie, each Director movie has a Score. However, the Score of a Director movie contains more than just music. The Score window in Director contains information about when and where each of the cast members appears on the Stage. The Score describes the action that happens in the movie. The action in a Director movie takes place in a window called the Stage. To create a Director movie, you add cast members (media elements) to the Cast window by creating them in Director or importing them. Next, you place them on the Stage as sprites. A sprite is simply a copy of a cast member that appears on the Stage. Then you refine the actions of the sprites by editing them on the Stage or in the Score.

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ADOBE DIRECTOR 11.0
User Guide
8
Exiting and re-entering the tabbed view.
Windows®’ users can exit the tabbed document mode by clicking the
Restore button. Mac® users can use the Break Apart Tabbed Documents option in the Window menu to enter into
the untabbed mode, where all the tabs from the tabbed document window are split up into separate windows. To re-
enter the tabbed mode, Windows users click the maximize box on any document window, and Mac users use the Tab
Documents Together option in the Window menu. If the Score and Stage are docked together in the maximized
tabbed view, they will continue to be docked even after you exit that mode.
The debugger is now a separate window from the script window.
When you open the debugger window and
click the Stage in the maximized tabbed view, the debugger window is relocated to the back of the Stage. It can be
brought to front by using the shortcut Ctrl+F11 or Cmd+F11.
Collapsing a panel.
To collapse a panel, you have to click the title of the panel, unlike in previous versions where
clicking on any portion of the title bar collapsed the panel.
MIAWs are not present in tabs and remain as separate document windows like the debugger. Only MIAWS
created as tool MIAWS can be docked in the docking channels.
MIAWS behind the Stage can be brought to front using the open() lingo function for MIAWS.
Understanding the Director metaphor
The Director user interface is designed around a movie metaphor. Each project you create can be thought of as a
movie, with a cast of characters, a Score, a Stage where the action takes place, and a director (you, the author). Each
media element that appears in your movie (sound, video, images, text, buttons, and so on) can be thought of as a
member of the movie’s cast. In Director, the Cast window is where you view the list of media elements that appear
in your movie.
As with a real movie, each Director movie has a Score. However, the Score of a Director movie contains more than
just music. The Score window in Director contains information about when and where each of the cast members
appears on the Stage. The Score describes the action that happens in the movie.
The action in a Director movie takes place in a window called the Stage. To create a Director movie, you add cast
members (media elements) to the Cast window by creating them in Director or importing them. Next, you place
them on the Stage as sprites. A sprite is simply a copy of a cast member that appears on the Stage. Then you refine
the actions of the sprites by editing them on the Stage or in the Score.