After you have created the animation, the final Timeline of the animation sequence will be like
as shown in the following figure.
TIMELINE
20.250
45
41 II
On
To play the animation, click on the first keyframe in the Timeline and then follow any of these
steps.
Click the Control menu and then click Play.
Press the Enter key on the keyboard.
You can see the movement of the car from its initial position to the final position.
Tweened Animation
In a tweened animation, you need to animate just the first and the last keyframe because Flash
automatically animates the intermediate frames to produce the desired animation sequence.
It is easier and simpler to create a tweened animation as you need not animate each frame
manually. Moreover, tweened animations are faster and smaller in size than frame-by-frame
animations. Tweened animation can be classified into two types, namely, motion tweening and
shape tweening
Motion Tweening
In motion tweening, the motion of an object is animated on the stage by setting the initial and
final positions and then letting Flash create the intermediate movements. To understand the
motion tweening in a better way, consider an example where a butterfly is to be moved from
one flower to another. To create this animation, follow these steps.
1. Open a new Flash document.
2.
Draw colourful flowers on Layer 1 and rename it to Flowers. You can also import the
image of flowers.
3.
Insert a new layer and rename it to Clouds.
4. Import the image of clouds and place them at appropriate position on the stage.
5.
Insert a new layer and rename it to Butterfly.
6. Import the image of a butterfly to the library.
From the Library panel, click and drag the image of the butterfly onto the stage.
Resize the image of the butterfly as per your need using the Free-Transform Tool.
Place the butterfly on the first flower to set its initial position.
10. Convert the butterfly to a graphic symbol.
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Answer:
The timeline in Adobe Animate organizes and controls a document's content over time in layers and frames. Like a movie film, Animate documents divide lengths of time into frames. Layers are like multiple filmstrips stacked on top of one another, each containing a different image that appears on the Stage. The major components of the Timeline are layers, frames, and the playhead.
The timeline shows where animation occurs in a document, including frame-by-frame animation, tweened animation, and motion paths. Controls in the layers section of the timeline let you hide, show, lock, or unlock layers, and display layer content as outlines. You can drag timeline frames to a new location on the same layer or to a different layer
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