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History

  • 1/11/2013 - MXML-based project can now be compiled into a working HTML/JS project
  • 2/10/2013 - Added HTTPService, LazyCollection, and a List class.
  • 3/01/2013 - Added Adobe Flash Builder integration.

Set Up

This is the setup for developers working with the source code. If you only want to use Flash Builder to play with the FlexJS framework, see: Using FlexJS with Adobe Flash Builder.

  1. Get Apache Flex 4.9 up and running. We don't really use any of its code, but getting it up and running makes sure you have the build tools and playerglobal.swc we need.
  2. Get the ASJS code from: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/flex/asjs/branches/develop/
  3. In the frameworks/as folder, run ant. You may need a local.properties or a FLEX_HOME environment variable to build successfully. This should result in a frameworks/as/libs/FlexJSUI.swc
  4. Get the Falcon code from https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/flex/falcon/trunk/
  5. Run ant to build Falcon.
  6. Change to compiler.js folder and run ant to build FalconJS.

The Demo

MXML->SWF
In the ASJS folders under branches/develop/examples/FlexJSTest_again is a sample "hello world" application. You should be able to compile FlexJSTest.mxml into a working SWF by using Falcon (and not the MXMLC compiler in Apache Flex 4.9). Find the Falcon mxmlc script in the Falcon folders under compiler/generated/dist/sdk/bin and run:

mxmlc -compiler.mxml.children-as-data -library-path+=<path to folder containing FlexJSUI.swc> FlexJSTest.mxml

You should be able to launch the SWF, see a button and some text, click the button and see the text change.

MXML->JS
Now you should be able to create an HTML/JS equivalent by running FalconJS. In compiler.js/bin is its mxmlc script. Use the exact same arguments as you did before, i.e.

mxmlc -compiler.mxml.children-as-data -library-path+=<path to folder containing FlexJSUI.swc> FlexJSTest.mxml

and the FalconJS compiler will generate an example html file and a single minified .js file.

If you then open the HTML file in a browser (I've used FireFox and Safari on Mac and FireFox on Windows) you will again see the button and text and clicking on the button will change the text but hey! no Flash is involved. It is pure HTML/JS. Right now the appearance of things is a bit different, but that is a To Do item. I don't know if we can make it exactly the same as it looks in Flash, but we should be able to get better visual match.

MXML->Cordova/PhoneGap

Once you have the HTML and JS file(s), you can copy these into the www folder in a Cordova/PhoneGap application and publish it and see it work on a phone or desktop emulator. A To Do item is to automate this process.

Debugging

If you set the -debug flag on the compiler, instead of a single minified .js file you will get one .js file for each of your MXML or AS files, and the compiler will output a XXXDeps.js file and html file. See the console output when you compile. To get it to run, you will need to copy in code from various places. The desired directory structure looks like this:

index.html                      (contains the html described above)
FlexJSTestDeps.js
examples                        (the examples folder from asjs/branches/develop)
goog                            (the goog folder from Google Closure)
third_party                     (the third_party folder from Google Closure)
frameworks                      (the frameworks folder from asjs/branches/develop);

Notes

  • The code does not currently support the classic {} data-binding syntax. Instead, you can install a "beads" plug-in to handle simple binding scenarios. See the use of SimpleBinding in MyInitialView.mxml.

Discussion

As you can hopefully see, the first building blocks are now in place such that the ASJS framework and FalconJS compiler can create applications using familiar tools, components, and workflows. You can use Adobe Flash Builder or other Flex-capable IDE to quickly build or prototype an application on Flash using structured-programming techniques afforded by ActionScript, then convert it to a HTML/JS application that can run on browsers or mobile devices without Flash.

Next Steps

  • More components
  • CSS handling for default values
  • Data-binding syntax support
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