System
1161
useCodepage (System.useCodepage property)
public static useCodepage : Boolean
A Boolean value that tells Flash Player whether to use Unicode or the traditional code page of
the operating system running the player to interpret external text files. The default value of
System.useCodepage
is false.
■
When the property is set to false, Flash Player interprets external text files as Unicode.
(These files must be encoded as Unicode when you save them.)
■
When the property is set to true, Flash Player interprets external text files using the
traditional code page of the operating system running the player.
Text that you load as an external file (using the
loadVariables()
or
getURL()
statements, or
the LoadVars class or XML class) must be encoded as Unicode when you save the text file in
order for Flash Player to recognize it as Unicode. To encode external files as Unicode, save the
files in an application that supports Unicode, such as Notepad on Windows 2000.
If you load external text files that are not Unicode-encoded, you should set
System.useCodepage
to true. Add the following code as the first line of code in the first
frame of the SWF file that is loading the data:
System.useCodepage = true;
When this code is present, Flash Player interprets external text using the traditional code page
of the operating system running Flash Player. This is generally CP1252 for an English
Windows operating system and Shift-JIS for a Japanese operating system. If you set
System.useCodepage
to true, Flash Player 6 and later treat text as Flash Player 5 does. (Flash
Player 5 treated all text as if it were in the traditional code page of the operating system
running the player.)
If you set
System.useCodepage
to true, remember that the traditional code page of the
operating system running the player must include the characters used in your external text file
in order for the text to display. For example, if you load an external text file that contains
Chinese characters, those characters cannot display on a system that uses the CP1252 code
page because that code page does not include Chinese characters.
To ensure that users on all platforms can view external text files used in your SWF files, you
should encode all external text files as Unicode and leave
System.useCodepage
set to false by
default. This way, Flash Player 6 and later interprets the text as Unicode.
Availability:
ActionScript 1.0; Flash Player 6
Содержание FLASH 8-ACTIONSCRIPT 2.0 LANGUAGE
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