Book Image

LiveCode Mobile Development Beginner's Guide

By : Colin Holgate
Book Image

LiveCode Mobile Development Beginner's Guide

By: Colin Holgate

Overview of this book

LiveCode is a tool for developing mobile apps designed for those who don't want to use Objective-C, C++ or Java. Although it is a tool full of rich features to create apps it can be challenging to get beyond the basics and build interactive and fun apps. Using this book, you can develop various apps and this book guides you through "till you upload the apps in the appstore."LiveCode Mobile Development Beginner's Guide" will explain how to create applications with the easiest, most practical cross platform framework available, Livecode Mobile and upload the apps to the appstore with minimal effort.Throughout the book, you'll learn details that will help you become a pro at mobile app development using LiveCode. You begin with simple calculator application and quickly enhance it using LiveCode Mobile. Start by learning the interface controls for videos and images of LiveCode's environment. Dig into configuring devices, building user interfaces, and making rich media applications, then finish by uploading the mobile applications to App Stores. You will learn how to build apps for devices such as iPhone, Android with the recently developed LiveCode Mobile through sample applications of increasing complexity.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
LiveCode Mobile Development Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Time for Action – setting up the Keepers card


As the Keepers card is at the end of the stack, you can get to it with either repeated View/Go Next actions, or just a single View/Go Last action.

  1. Go to the Keepers card, and create a MobGUI button for Prev, Next, and Play Media. Make a LiveCode field, and name it mediaURL. You should now have something looking like this:

  2. Add these lines to the touchStart handler of the Prev button:

       if the name of this card is not "Keepers" then
          go previous
       end if
  3. Add these lines to the touchStart handler of the Next button:

       if the number of this card < the number of cards then
          go next
       end if
  4. Add this line to the Play Media button's touchStart handler:

       showMedia field "mediaURL"
  5. Select those four controls and Group them. Check the box that says Behave like a background. Name the group as keeperbuttons.

  6. Edit the script of the new group. Add this refresh handler:

    on refresh
       set the itemdelimiter to "."
       if char 1 of the last item of field...