Chapter 6. Statements
We saw
in earlier chapters how ActionScript stores and manipulates data. In
this chapter we'll learn how to do things with that data.
We'll give Flash instructions in the form of
statements, or phrases of code that instruct the
interpreter to perform some task.
To make something happen in Flash -- whether stopping a sound,
playing a movie, running a function, or looping some code -- we
use a statement. In fact, an ActionScript program can be defined as
nothing more than a list of statements that tell the interpreter what
we want Flash to do. Here, for example, is an entire ActionScript
program, which consists of four statements and tells the interpreter
to load a web page into the browser:
var protocol = "http"; // Statement 1
var domain = "www.moock.org"; // Statement 2
var path = "webdesign/flash/"; // Statement 3
getURL(protocol + "://" + domain + "/" + path); // Statement 4
Scripting a movie with ActionScript is simply a matter of attaching
statements to frames, movie clips, and buttons. This chapter explores
the syntactic makeup of statements and lists the general statement
categories. We'll touch on all the ActionScript statements in
this chapter, but some of the more important ones will be examined in
detail in later chapters.
6.1. Types of Statements
Conceptually speaking, there are five core types of
statements:
- Statements that control the execution flow of a program
loops
conditionals
ifFrameLoaded
- Statements that declare variables
var
set
- Statements that declare, call, and return values from functions
function
function call
call
return
- Statements that deal with objects
with
for . . . in
- Statements that represent a data value
any expression (especially expressions with side effects)
These informal categories help us to understand what we can tell the
interpreter to do using statements. At first glance, the list may
seem fairly limited. However, we'll see that there are many
variations of conditionals and loops and that there are thousands of
things we can do via function calls. First, let's see how
statements are formed.
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