Built-in Classes and Objects
This
Language
Reference assumes that you understand the terms
class, object, and
instance as discussed exhaustively in Chapter 12. The built-in classes of ActionScript are used
to create objects that can control a movie and manipulate data. The
built-in ActionScript classes are Array,
Boolean, Color,
Date, MovieClip,
Number, Object,
Sound, String,
XML, XMLNode, and
XMLSocket. To create an instance of a particular
class, we use the class’s constructor
function with the new operator. For example, to
make a new object of the Color class, we use the
Color constructor as follows:
myColor = new Color(_root);
For each class in the Language Reference, the Constructor entry shows how to create new objects of that particular class (i.e., it demonstrates each class’s constructor function syntax). The properties, methods, and event handlers available for objects in the class are also summarized along with a description of the class’s purpose and typical use. Some classes also define methods or properties that are accessed through the class constructor itself, not individual instances. These methods and properties are listed as Class Methods and Class Properties. Full details for each class’s properties, methods, and event handlers are given in an alphabetical list after each class’s general introduction.
ActionScript’s special built-in objects—Arguments, Key, Math, Mouse and Selection—are interspersed alphabetically with the class descriptions in this book but are ...
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