The following example shows how you can remove the default gradient background image for a Flex application by setting the backgroundImage style.
Full code after the jump.
Continue reading ‘Setting or clearing the application background image in Flex’
The following example shows how you can determine if a Flex application has focus or not by listening for the activate and deactivate events on the <mx:Application /> container.
Full code after the jump.
Continue reading ‘Determining if a Flex application has focus using the activate and deactivate events’
The following example shows how you can detect when the mouse leaves the bounds of a Flex application by listening for the stage object’s mouseLeave event.
Full code after the jump.
Continue reading ‘Detecting when a mouse leaves a Flex application’
I’ve seen this come up a few times in various lists, and figured maybe somebody out there may find this useful.
The following example shows how you can prevent user input in a Flex application by setting the enabled property to false in the <mx:Application /> tag, or by setting the Application.application.enabled property.
Any suggestions? Leave them in the comments!
Full code after the jump.
Continue reading ‘Disabling user input in a Flex Application’
The following example shows how you can use the styleName style in a Flex Application to remove the background image, set the background color to white and left aligns the content.
To quote the Flex 2.0.1 documentation, “Overriding the default Application container styles“:
The Flex default style sheet defines a plain style name that sets all padding to 0 pixels, removes the default background image, sets the background color to white, and left-aligns the children.
Full code after the jump.
Continue reading ‘Setting a Flex application’s style name’