I highly suspect anyone would be using web-tier compiler anymore, in the remotest possibility that anyone is It can be easily replaced by a java wrapper script that invokes mxmlc
Thanks, Pratyoosh -----Original Message----- From: Alex Harui [mailto:aha...@adobe.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 09, 2013 12:10 PM To: dev@flex.apache.org Subject: RE: Web Tier Compiler To be clear, this is not about the source for the 1.1 compiler or any compiler that supports AS2. Apparently there is a compiler that supports Flex 3 and AS3. Is anyone using that? -Alex ________________________________________ From: Nicholas Kwiatkowski [nicho...@spoon.as] Sent: Wednesday, October 09, 2013 8:50 AM To: dev@flex.apache.org Subject: Re: Web Tier Compiler Because CF still uses the 1.1 Flex compiler... Which didn't have a standalone compiler.. Better yet, there is now about 8 years of crazy as2 code out there built in CF that depends on this old version. Sigh. On Wed, Oct 9, 2013 at 4:06 AM, Tom Chiverton <t...@extravision.com> wrote: > On 09/10/2013 02:16, Nick Collins wrote: > >> I'm assuming the web tier compiler is the one where we can load an >> MXML file from the server much like one would load a JSP and it will >> compile the app on first request and return the SWF? I personally >> don't have a need for that, but others may. I'd rather push through >> the current BlazeDS then work on that portion later if there is a >> need for it. >> > Snap. > > If the web tier compiler vanished off the face of the earth, all the > affected people need to do is run the .mxml through mxmlc and make a > tiny change to the hosting HTML page, as far as I can tell. > As soon as there was a standalone compiler, everyone I know stopped > using the compile-on-the-fly one. I have no idea why things like > ColdFusion still ship it ! > > Tom > This email is confidential and subject to important disclaimers and conditions including on offers for the purchase or sale of securities, accuracy and completeness of information, viruses, confidentiality, legal privilege, and legal entity disclaimers, available at http://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/disclosures/email.