• Home
  • Reviews
  • Featured
  • Archives
  • Videos
  • Devices
  • Tegra
  • Send Tips
  • Contact
  • AndroidCommunity on Twitter AndroidCommunity on Facebook AndroidCommunity on Google+ AndroidCommunity RSS Feed

Android Community

    • MUST READ

      STORIES

    • Samsung GALAXY S 4 launching with Cricket Wireless in early June

      May 22, 2013

    • HTC top executives continue to disappear

      May 22, 2013

    • Samsung spends $48 million to secure a 10% stake in Pantech

      May 22, 2013

  • Trending Topics
  • Jelly Bean
  • NVIDIA
  • Galaxy S 4
  • HTC One
  • Nexus 7
  • Sell Your Used Phone

Android Community 101: What is Flash Builder? (4.5)

4
  • By Chris Burns
  • on 11 Apr, 2011

Android Community 101: What is Flash Builder? (4.5)

Behold the great conquerer of world, the great unifier that works better than a big bar of chocolate, or so they’re hoping. This is Flash Builder 4.5, a version of the app to build apps that’ll soon create standalone Flex AIR apps that’ll work on Android, Blackberry, and Apple’s iOS, all inside the same framework! What this means, if it’s adopted by enough individuals, is that developers are about to have a whole heck of a lot easier time creating cross-platform moneymakers to turn awesome experiences into cash.


Flash Builder is what Makes a Flash-Based Project

Of course, that’s not the only reason people make apps, right, not just for the money – but it IS a reality, developers gotta get paid, so an Action Script language-based mini-platform in Flash might well be the answer. Flash, as we know it right this moment, is primarily used for video inside browser windows – people might argue that it’s attempting to fan out, and that it HAS fanned out, but the main functionality remains inside video. What this version of Flash Builder will be doing is encouraging developers to create apps that’ll run on essentially any platform that can work with a Flash plugin, or in the desktop’s case, Flex AIR.

PHP and Further Integration

This newest version of Flash Builder, there’s also support for PHP (another scripting language) that’ll allow developers to have PHP on their side, Flash on the user’s side, and this new development environment in between. This newest version of Flash Builder has also moved on to Eclipse version 3.6.1 (Helios) – Eclipse being another environment in which a developer of Android apps can create, edit, fix, and generally go wild. Have a peek at this official video from Adobe on this brand new version of the creator of Flash worlds:

Share
  • Student wins science fair with 30-second phone battery charger
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 with Android 4.3 spotted in benchmark results
  • Verizon HTC One reality returns as DROID DNA offer pops up

Tags: adobe flashAppleblackberryGoogleiOSRIM

  • Micgrideon

    Crap video guys. Not mobile friendly at all…

    • http://chaoticaa.myopenid.com/ Ari-Sama

      It’s “Adobe TV”… You can’t expect anything made by Adobe to be quite so mobile friendly!

  • http://chaoticaa.myopenid.com/ Ari-Sama

    I’m usually against automated cross-platform developing. Many OS’s, more applicable with mobile OS’s, have a certain look and feel that all apps need to conform to to match the look and feel of the OS. Some example OS’s are iOS and WP7, or on the desktop OS X. Apps that don’t follow the feel of all other apps just seem so out of place on those devices.

  • http://chaoticaa.myopenid.com/ Ari-Sama

    I’m usually against automated cross-platform developing. Many OS’s, more applicable with mobile OS’s, have a certain look and feel that all apps need to conform to to match the look and feel of the OS. Some example OS’s are iOS and WP7, or on the desktop OS X. Apps that don’t follow the feel of all other apps just seem so out of place on those devices.

  • Search

  • REVIEWS

    • AT&T LG Optimus G Pro ReviewAT&T LG Optimus G Pro Review
    • Iron Man 3 game Review: what you need to knowIron Man 3 game Review: what you need to know
    • Samsung GALAXY S 4 ReviewSamsung GALAXY S 4 Review
    • Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 ReviewSamsung Galaxy Note 8.0 Review
    • Pebble review: Two weeks with a smartwatchPebble review: Two weeks with a smartwatch
  • HANDS-ON & QUICK LOOKS

    • Opera for Android exits beta, we go hands onOpera for Android exits beta, we go hands on
    • NVIDIA Tegra 4i demos i500 LTE modem on Cat 4: 150Mbps of speedNVIDIA Tegra 4i demos i500 LTE modem on Cat 4: 150Mbps of speed
    • HP Slatebook x2 Tablet hands-onHP Slatebook x2 Tablet hands-on


  • T-Mobile G1 Accessories
  • RECENT COMMENTS

  • About
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise

Copyright 2013 Android Community