My index.cfm contains two frames. One frame contains the flash file
while the other contains some text. Once you click on a particular
movie clip in Flash, then the text frame on the right should display the
proper text. I was going about this the hard way so that each time a
new file would be created (if one didn't exist) then the file would grab
the text from the database.
Instead, I have the same set up (index.cfm containing two frames) but
instead of creating a new file each time, I will just have one file
(text.cfm) that grabs the data from the database. This way I will not
have to create a lot of different files.
I am having trouble getting getURL() in Flash to display the text in the
sibling frame. I am using:
getURL("text.cfm?id="+dragID,"_top.text")
Do you know what I am doing wrong?
thanx -
Frank
________________________________
From: Daniel Farmer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, May 31, 2004 11:32 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: calling on Flash to create a file
What about calling a custom VB application or using WSH ( running on the
server ) to create your file?
----- Original Message -----
From: Frank Dewey
To: CF-Talk
Sent: Monday, May 31, 2004 12:26 PM
Subject: RE: calling on Flash to create a file
That's a valid reason to consider...
I will be thinking about the best route to go then. Thank you -
Frank
________________________________
From: John Dowdell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, May 28, 2004 7:30 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: calling on Flash to create a file
At 3:22 PM 5/28/4, Frank Dewey wrote:
>I am using Flash (although I should be going home!) to talk to
>ColdFusion that connects to a database. All works well as far as
updates
>and inserts, ...). However I would like for my application to also be
>able to create a file.
Think about where the thing actually lives. If you've got in-browser
SWF,
then you're asking a plugin to write to (presumably) a known location
on
the hard drive, which is a safety risk. If you're running in a
standalone
then you've got to ask what your standalone shell can do... if it's in
the
Central shell you've got a different situation... you might even be
trying
to run a SWF on a server, can't be sure.
Generally, for "Does [some form] of SWF play write to disk?" the
answer
would be "no". You may be able to achieve your goal, though, depending
on
exactly what it is.
jd
________________________________
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