Book Image

Flash Development for Android Cookbook

By : Joseph Labrecque
Book Image

Flash Development for Android Cookbook

By: Joseph Labrecque

Overview of this book

Flash has now arrived to Android — the fastest growing smartphone platform. This offers massive opportunities for Flash developers who want to get into mobile development. At the same time, working on smartphones will introduce new challenges and issues that Flash developers may not be familiar with. The Flash Development for Android Cookbook enables Flash developers to branch out into Android mobile applications through a set of essential, easily demonstrable recipes. It takes you through the entire development workflow: from setting up a local development environment, to developing and testing your application, to compiling for distribution to the ever-growing Android Market. The Flash Development for Android Cookbook starts off with recipes that cover development environment configuration as well as mobile project creation and conversion. It then moves on to exciting topics such as the use of touch and gestures, responding to device movement in 3D space, working with multimedia, and handling application layout. Essential tasks such as tapping into native processes and manipulating the file system are also covered. We then move on to some cool advanced stuff such as Android-specific device permissions, application debugging and optimization techniques, and the packaging and distribution options available on the mobile Android platform. In a nutshell, this cookbook enables you to get quickly up to speed with mobile Android development using the Flash Platform in ways that are meaningful and immediately applicable to the rapidly growing area of mobile application development.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Flash Development for Android Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Detecting whether or not an Android device supports the accelerometer


When developing projects which target the Android operating system, it is always a good idea to make sure that certain sensors, such as the accelerometer, are actually supported on the device. In the case of an Android phone, this will probably always be the case, but we should never assume the capabilities of any device.

How to do it...

We will need to use Accelerometer API classes to detect whether or not an accelerometer is supported:

  1. 1. First, import the following classes into your project:

    import flash.display.StageScaleMode;
    import flash.display.StageAlign;
    import flash.display.Stage;
    import flash.display.Sprite;
    import flash.text.TextField;
    import flash.text.TextFormat;
    import flash.sensors.Accelerometer;
    
  2. 2. Declare a TextField and TextFormat object pair to allow visible output upon the device:

    private var traceField:TextField;
    private var traceFormat:TextFormat;
    
  3. 3. We will now set up our TextField, apply a TextFormat...