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CHAPTER 8
Text
Macromedia Director MX 2004 creates text that is editable, anti-aliased, and compact for fast
downloading of outline fonts on both the Macintosh and Windows platforms. Combine these
features with any of the animation capabilities of Director, such as rotation, and you can create
wonderful text effects in your Director movies.
You can embed fonts in a movie to ensure that text appears in a specific font when a movie is
delivered, regardless of which fonts are available on the user’s computer.
Because Director renders text in the display font, and anti-aliases, or smooths, it as the movie
plays, text in Director is very compact and downloads quickly from the Internet. Most of the
high-quality text you see in web browsers is actually a GIF or JPEG graphic, and takes longer to
download than Director text.
Director provides many ways to add text to a movie. You can either create new text cast members
within Director or import text from an outside source such as a document stored on the Internet.
You can import plain text, RTF, or HTML documents. After text is part of your movie, you can
format the text in a variety of ways by using the Director formatting tools. Director offers
standard professional formatting functions, including alignment, tabs, kerning, spacing,
subscripts, superscripts, color, and so on. You can also create hypertext links for any text.
Text in Director is editable when you are working on your movie and, optionally, while a
movie plays.
You can also script in Lingo or JavaScript syntax to control text. For example, you can use script
to edit the text in existing cast members, specify text formatting such as font and size, and
interpret strings that users enter.
To create the smallest possible text cast members, use field text. Field text is standard text
controlled by your system software, the same as the text you see in dialog boxes and menu bars.
Director does not anti-alias field text or support paragraph formatting and tabs for fields. As
with regular text, script can control field text and specify whether field text is editable while
a movie plays.
Whereas regular text is best suited for large type that you want to look as good as possible, field
text is an excellent choice for large blocks of smaller text in standard fonts (such as Times or
Helvetica) that don’t need to be anti-aliased.
Summary of Contents for DIRECTOR MX 2004-USING DIRECTOR
Page 1: ...DIRECTOR MX 2004 Using Director...
Page 16: ...16 Chapter 1 Introduction...
Page 82: ...82 Chapter 3 Sprites...
Page 98: ...98 Chapter 4 Animation...
Page 134: ...134 Chapter 5 Bitmaps...
Page 242: ...242 Chapter 10 Sound and Synchronization...
Page 274: ...274 Chapter 11 Using Digital Video...
Page 290: ...290 Chapter 12 Behaviors...
Page 302: ...302 Chapter 13 Navigation and User Interaction...
Page 334: ...334 Chapter 15 The 3D Cast Member 3D Text and 3D Behaviors...
Page 392: ...392 Chapter 16 Working with Models and Model Resources...
Page 418: ...418 Chapter 18 Movies in a Window...
Page 446: ...446 Chapter 22 Managing and Testing Director Projects...