Well, the past 24 hours have been interesting to say the least. I've never really written a class, yet I know a lot about them and understand them for the most part. Before starting the project, I knew I was going to run into data access issues but didn't really have a solution. I'd never heard of mvc until yesterday so thanks for pointing me in the right direction. I'm confident I can start building classes using the mvc pattern, however, I don't think I'm quite ready for something like ARP. I think I'd be taking on too much and our development resources are almost tapped. Or should I seriously reconsider using ARP, is it something I can easily implement later once I'm more confident with classes?


At  7/12/2007 Thursday 04:00 AM, you wrote:
Hi,

I would recommend ARP for this too. It's a bit tricky to use (at first),
but it will keep your code clean for sure and save you a lot of time.
There's a remoting example that you could adjust quite easily.

As for the moviecliploader, I try to use a single class to do all my
loading. I guess that's what you mean by a "smart" loader.

Sunil
http://www.suniljolly.com

PS - Hi! I'm new to the list, I hould have joined a long time ago!

-----Original Message-----

Hi,

    I would suggest looking at ARP or another Framework to handle your
Service calls through a single interface which you create services for.

    It is well documented with examples and OS so you should be able to
get the hang of it quite quickly.

    osflash.org/projects/arp

    HTH

    Glen

Richard Mueller wrote:
>
> I'm building an application that is going to use Flash Remoting very
> heavily.  I'm wondering how I should structure my Service
> connections.  Should I put them in each(several) loaded movies or in
> the root timeline where any loaded move can access them.  The latter
> would cause issues when trying to test each movie individually.  But
> by putting the Service connections in each movie would require imports

> needed for FR at the top..
>
> Also, I'm new to using the moviecliploader.  I have a few functioning
> properly, however, is it wise to try and create a "smart" loader?
> Meaning use one loader and zip when the zip.swf is loaded and zag with

> zag.swf.  Or should I just accept, and get in the habit of using a zip

> loader and a zag loader separately, meaning each loader simply serve a

> specific function.
>
> Richard
>

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