Computer Science, asked by deeptiojha5, 3 months ago

________ stands for clockwise moton in Adobe flash​

Answers

Answered by PᴀʀᴛʜTʀɪᴘᴀᴛʜɪ
2

Answer:

Creating a Motion Tween

"Auto" generally means that it doesn't rotate at all, or only rotates based on other parameters; "None" means it will not rotate, period; the other two options are "CW" and "CCW", or "ClockWise" and "CounterClockWise". "Clockwise" rotates to the right; "CounterClockWise" rotates to the left.

Answered by bugaluchukwuezeasor
1

Explanation:Creating a Motion Tween

To do that, you would create a motion tween in the same way that you did in Lesson One, by creating a symbol and then copying your key from your first frame to your last frame before selecting "Motion Tween" from the Properties bar, or right-clicking on the timeline and selecting Insert Motion Tween, or by going to Insert->Create Motion Tween. (You can move your symbol if you'd like, depending on if you want your shape to slide and rotate, or just rotate).

Now if you look on the Properties bar, you'll see on the lower half an option that says "Rotate" and a drop-down menu with the default setting on "Auto". "Auto" generally means that it doesn't rotate at all, or only rotates based on other parameters; "None" means it will not rotate, period; the other two options are "CW" and "CCW", or "ClockWise" and "CounterClockWise". "Clockwise" rotates to the right; "CounterClockWise" rotates to the left.

Pick one or the other, and then set the number of full 360-degree rotations your symbol will make in the field to the right. (In the image displayed in this article I set 1 rotation). As you can see you can combine linear movement and rotational movement in a single tween. Keep in mind that the symbol will rotate around its central pivot point and that you can click and drag on that pivot point to move it elsewhere and change the nature of the rotation.​

Hope this helps!

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