How to make the Flash CS4 Help and Language reference available offline.

In CS4, the help system in Flash is set to online by default, which means pressing F1 opens a new browser window, takes you to LiveDocs and, most of the time, gives you no useful information whatsoever – and takes over half a minute to load.  Luckily I came across the following comment in the article http://labs.bigspaceship.com/2008/12/09/air-app-as3-language-reference/;

I should note, however, that the local copy of the language reference still exists with CS4. I wrote a post a while back detailing where it can be found for both OSX and Windows:

http://www.jonnymac.com/blog/2008/11/04/offline-help-and-language-reference-location-in-flash-cs4/

The difference is that CS4 automatically tries to send you to the online copy first. You can also access the local copy by telling Flash to “keep you offline”:

Go to Window > Extensions > Connections. In the panel that pops up, click the arrow at the top-right and select “Offline options”. From there you can check the box for “Keep me offline”. It will then always default to using the offline help. However, it may also prevent you from using any other panels which call out to the internet, such as Kuler.

Hope this helps!

Jon MacDonald on December 9th, 2008 at 12:30 pm

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About James

James is a Senior New Media Developer at MMT Digital, and has BA(Hons) in Design for Interactive Media from the University of Gloucestershire. He loves designing and producing all sorts of website and Flash-related things, as well as prattling on about technologies.Day-to-day he works with Flash, Dreamweaver, Director, Microsoft Office Sharepoint Server 2007 (MOSS) and in his spare time he mucks about in Flex and Wordpress.Follow James on Twitter.

3 Responses to “How to make the Flash CS4 Help and Language reference available offline.”

  1. John Hattan 10th December, 2008 at 5:33 pm # Reply

    I just tried this and discovered that the AS2 help included with Flash 10 is just a placeholder with a link to this broken page.

    Someday I’m gonna figure out why Adobe decided to screw up their help system so badly with CS4.

  2. James 10th December, 2008 at 5:38 pm # Reply

    Wow. That’s even more useless than I would have thought possible.

    Most of the time I just use the CS3 help system, but that’s generally rubbish too. You think this is part of a cunning plan to move everyone to Flex? Accurate code hinting that removes the need to both with the help system!

  3. Naren 4th January, 2011 at 10:20 am # Reply

    Thanks James, it helped me….

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