
Registered since September 28th, 2017
Has a total of 4281 bookmarks.
Showing top Tags within 1 bookmarks
howto information development guide reference administration design website software solution service online product business uk tool company linux code server system application web list video marine create data experience tutorial description explanation learn technology build article blog world boat project download windows lookup security free performance javascript technical london control network beautiful tools support course file research purchase image library programming youtube example php construction opensource install community html quality profile computer feature power browser music platform mobile process work manage professional user share database hardware buy industry internet dance advice developer installation search 3d camera access customer material travel money test standard develop css review documentation engineering photography webdesign engine device digital speed api source event question management program client phone discussion story simple content water marketing app yacht account setup idea interface package fast communication cheap compare script market study easy live google resource operation demonstration startup monitor
Tag selected: interlace.
Looking up interlace tag. Showing 1 results. Clear
Saved by uncleflo on October 14th, 2011.
While I can’t claim any credit for the solution – most of the credit goes to my colleague from Adobe Consulting Flex Architect Brian O’Conner, and the alternative approach comes from Roger Gonzalez from the Flex Team – I recently came across a small issue. By default, when you embed or load an image in Flex, “smoothing” is set to false. This makes sense since most of the images you’d probably want in their native size, and you’d want pixel perfect. But, when you want to scale the image, either up or down, or rotate the image, the image is rendered with the “nearest neighbor” scaling method. You can read more about the issue in the flash player at Tinic Uro’s Blog. As you can see in the example that follows, the results of this are less than beautiful.
No further bookmarks found.