Flash Naming Conventions
With the introduction of the MX family of products, including Flash
MX, Macromedia abandoned a standard numeric versioning system for its
Flash authoring tool. The Flash Player, however, is still versioned
numerically. Table P-1 describes the naming
conventions for Flash used in this book.
Table P-1. Flash naming conventions used in this book|
Flash MX
|
The Flash MX authoring tool (as opposed to the Flash Player).
|
Flash Player 6
|
The Flash Player, version 6. The Flash Player is a browser plugin for
major web browsers on Windows, Macintosh, and Linux. The
platform-specific versions of the plugin are referred to collectively
as "Flash Player 6," except where
noted.
|
Flash Player x.0.y.0
|
The Flash Player, specifically the release specified by
x and y, as in Flash Player
6.0.47.0.
|
Flash 6
|
Short name for "Flash Player 6,"
used where the distinction between Flash MX (the authoring tool) and
Flash Player 6 (the browser plugin) is irrelevant.
|
Flash 5 authoring tool
|
The Flash 5 authoring tool, which came before Flash MX (as opposed to
the Flash Player).
|
Flash Player 5
|
The Flash Player, version 5.
|
Flash 5
|
Short name for "Flash Player 5,"
used where the distinction between Flash 5 (the authoring tool) and
Flash Player 5 (the browser plugin) is irrelevant.
|
Flash 2, Flash 3, and Flash 4
|
Versions of the Flash Player prior to version 5.
|
Standalone Player
|
A version of the Flash Player that runs directly off the local system
rather than as a web browser plugin or ActiveX control.
|
Projector
|
A self-sufficient executable that includes both a
.swf file and a Standalone Player. Projectors
can be built for either the Macintosh or Windows operating system
using Flash's File Publish
feature.
|
|