On 06/26/2010 04:24 PM, Ricardo Pedroso wrote: > On Mon, Jun 21, 2010 at 9:19 AM, Chris Ohmstede <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> Hi, I've been using swfextract for a while and, being lazy as I am, >> finally wrote a gui front end for it so I won't have to write any more >> scripts. In the spirit of open source, I've released it onto >> sourceforge. Here's the link if you're interested: >> https://sourceforge.net/projects/flashextractor/ >> >> > I didn't tried yet, but I will. Many thanks for sharing. > > >> I pretty much use Linux exclusively any more so that's the only OS I've >> used it in. I suppose it would work in any OS with GTK+ and gnome >> libraries installed but no guarantees. Anyway, hope you find it useful. >> > I also have Linux as my primary OS. > But if you want to reach a wider audience you probably should go with, for eg, > wxWidgets or FLTK (both c++). > In this way you could reach also Mac OS X and Windows users. > > Just my 2 cents > > Regards, > Ricardo > > Hi Ricardo
I here what your saying, I'm more of a QT fan myself and have already ported some of my apps over to Windows via it. The thing is, reaching a wider audience is not really my intention. I consider Linux the land of free, Windows and Mac OS X the land of paid. As a programmer, I know how much money I spent on my education and the time and effort I spent refining my skills so I'm really not looking to take money out of the wallets of the developers / small companies that have developed Flash applications in Windows / Mac OS X (and there are plenty of them.) I started developing this app for my own personal needs and, as it improved, I wanted to give it to the Linux community which is constantly giving to me. My intention for this app, by the time I finally finish it, is that you'll be able to look at all the objects, see the associations, and, in fact, pull out individual objects, like a shape or sound, modify them to what you want and then re-inject them back into the compiled swf without having to take the whole thing apart and put it back together again. If this is useful to anyone else, your welcome to it. No offense to any other developers out there and I hope none is taken. The beauty of open source is you truly get to choose what you want to do with your source / application. Thanks for your suggestion Ricardo and, who knows, maybe in the future, I've been known to change my mind. Chris
