Operation Manual

Table Of Contents
449
Cross-product
Last updated 11/30/2015
Dreamweaver Fireworks tutorial
Setting Image Preview dialog box options
Apply the Show Pop-Up Menu behavior
Working with Flash and Dreamweaver
Edit a SWF file from Dreamweaver in Flash
If you have both Flash and Dreamweaver installed, you can select a SWF file in a Dreamweaver document and use Flash
to edit it. Flash does not edit the SWF file directly; it edits the source document (FLA file) and re-exports the SWF file.
1 In Dreamweaver, open the Property inspector (Window > Properties).
2 In the Dreamweaver document, do one of the following:
Click the SWF file placeholder to select it; then in the Property inspector click Edit.
Right-click (Windows) or Control-click (Macintosh) the placeholder for the SWF file, and select Edit With Flash
from the context menu.
Dreamweaver switches the focus to Flash, and Flash attempts to locate the Flash authoring file (FLA) for the
selected SWF file. If Flash cannot locate the Flash authoring file, you are prompted to locate it.
Note: If the FLA file or SWF file is locked, check out the file in Dreamweaver.
3 In Flash, edit the FLA file. The Flash Document window indicates that you are modifying the file from within
Dreamweaver.
4 When you finish making edits, click Done.
Flash updates the FLA file, re-exports it as a SWF file, closes, and then returns the focus to the Dreamweaver
document.
Note: To update the SWF file and keep Flash open, in Flash select File > Update for Dreamweaver.
5 To view the updated file in the document, click Play in the Dreamweaver Property inspector or press F12 to preview
your page in a browser window.
Working with Adobe Bridgeand Dreamweaver
About Adobe Bridge
Dreamweaver provides seamless integration with Adobe Bridge, the cross-platform file browser included with Adobe
Creative Suite 5 components. Adobe Bridge helps you locate, organize, and browse the assets you need to create print,
web, video, and mobile content. You can start Adobe Bridge from any Creative Suitecomponent (except Acrobat 9), and
use it to access both Adobe and non-Adobe asset types.