Macromedia studio 8-exploring studio 8 User Manual

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230 Tutorial: Building Your First Flash Application
8.
In the Property inspector, enter -150 in the Y text box.
This moves the 
slideShow
 movie clip instance upward 150 pixels in 
the keyframe in Frame 20. The motion tween from Frame 1 to 
Frame 20 slides the movie clip upward smoothly instead of causing the 
movie clip to jump from one position to the next.
9.
In the Timeline, select Frame 40 in Layer 1.
10.
In the Property inspector, select Motion from the Tween menu.
11.
Drag the Ease slider up until the Ease value is 100.
12.
Click the 
slides_mc
 movie clip instance on the Stage to select it.
13.
In the Property inspector, enter -300 in the Y text box.
14.
In the Timeline, select Frame 60 in Layer 1.
15.
In the Property inspector, select Motion from the Tween menu.
16.
Drag the Ease slider up until the Ease value is 100.
17.
Click the 
slides_mc
 movie clip instance on the Stage to select it.
18.
In the Property inspector, enter -450 in the Y text box.
19.
In the Timeline, select Frame 80 in Layer 1.
20.
Click the 
slides_mc
 movie clip instance on the Stage to select it.
21.
In the Property inspector, enter -600 in the Y text box.
22.
In the Timeline, click the number 1 in the Frame Number bar. 
23.
Press Enter (Windows) or Return (Macintosh). 
A preview of the animation plays on the Stage. The 
stop();
 
ActionScript you entered previously is ignored in preview mode.
You have now finished creating the slideShow symbol, which contains its 
own complex internal timeline. Next, you will edit the main Timeline of 
your FLA file.
The Timeline with the completed motion tweens
000_ExploringStudio.book  Page 230  Tuesday, August 30, 2005  9:30 AM