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In June 2006, ActionScript 3.0 debuted with Adobe Flex 2.0 and its corresponding player, Flash Player 9. ActionScript 3.0 was a fundamental restructuring of the language, so much so that it uses an entirely different virtual machine. Flash Player 9 contains two virtual machines, AVM1 for code written in ActionScript 1.0 and 2.0, and AVM2 for ...
Lightspark supports most of ActionScript 3.0 and has an NPAPI plug-in. [2] It will fall back on Gnash, a free SWF player on ActionScript 1.0 and 2.0 (AVM1) code. Lightspark supports OpenGL-based rendering and LLVM-based ActionScript execution and uses OpenGL shaders . The player is compatible with H.264 Flash videos on YouTube.
AMF was introduced with Flash Player 6, and this version is referred to as AMF0. It was unchanged until the release of Flash Player 9 and ActionScript 3.0, when new data types and language features prompted an update, called AMF3. [1] Flash Player 10 added vector and dictionary data types documented in a revised specification of January 2013.
As of January 2025, Ruffle supports most older Flash content, which use ActionScript 1.0 and 2.0, with 95% of the language and 78% of the API having been implemented. [8] Support for ActionScript 3.0 has improved significantly since August 2022, with about 90% of the language and 76% of the API having been implemented, and an additional 7% of ...
Also in 2008, Adobe released the first version of Adobe Integrated Runtime (later re-branded as Adobe AIR), a runtime engine that replaced Flash Player, and provided additional capabilities to the ActionScript 3.0 language to build desktop and mobile applications. With AIR, developers could access the file system (the user's files and folders ...
Flash Player 9 incorporated a new and more robust virtual machine for running the new ActionScript 3. Flex was the first Macromedia product to be re-branded under the Adobe name. Adobe Flex 3
Stage3D (codenamed Molehill [1]) is an Adobe Flash Player API for rendering interactive 3D graphics with GPU-acceleration, within Flash games and applications. Flash Player or AIR applications written in ActionScript 3 may use Stage3D to render 3D graphics, [2] and such applications run natively on Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, Apple iOS and Google ...
Flash Lite 4.0 supports ActionScript 3 and is a browser plugin, rather than a standalone player. It further extends the Flash Lite's features with multi-touch support, an advanced text rendering engine and a geolocation interface.