In addition to the major interface elements described earlier, Director provides other windows and panels that let you accomplish specific tasks. These operate similarly to the windows and panels in other MX applications, so if you're experienced with the latest versions of Flash, Fireworks, or Dreamweaver, you can skip this section.
Windows and panels are infinitely customizable. Panels can be collapsed so that only their title bars are visible, freeing up space on the desktop. You can dock panels to other panels, group them together, or ungroup them. And once you arrange your panels and windows to your liking, you can save and retrieve that layout by name.
When is a Window a Panel?Director makes no hard-and-fast distinction between windows and panels. In theory, a panel is a window that can be docked to, or grouped with, other panels. (Director's documentation also refers to these as tool windows.) Anything that can't is a plain old window (sometimes referred to as a document window). But the line is sometimes blurry. The Score and the Cast window can be docked to each other, but not to anything else. The paint window and the vector shape window can be grouped with other panels, but not docked. And then there are anomalies like the control panel, whichdespite its nameis technically neither a window nor a panel, but a palette. So don't worry about what's called what; just arrange your workspace the way you like it. If you want to dock or group something, try it. If it works, great; if not, there are plenty of other arrangements to try. |
Panels can be collapsed so that only their title bars are visible, freeing up space on the desktop. When you need to use a collapsed panel, it can be expanded with a single click.
Drag the panel by its gripper (Figure 1.25).
Panels can be docked to other panels, or (in Windows only) to the docking channels at either side of the application window (Figure 1.26).
As you drag the gripper over the panel or docking channel that you want to dock it to, watch for a black, rectangular outline to appear. This indicates where the docked panel will go.
Release the mouse button.
The panel will snap to the area indicated by the black outline.
Panels can be grouped that is, turned into a series of tabs within a single collapsible, dockable frame. A panel group may be given a name. Some panels are already in named groups by default (Figure 1.27).
Click the panel's Options menu (Figure 1.28).
Choose Group Panel Name With > Name of Panel Group.
Select the tab for the panel you want to remove.
Click the panel group's Options menu.
Choose Group Panel Name With > New Panel Group.
Click the panel's Options menu.
Choose Close Panel Group.
You can hide all panels, palettes, and toolbarsbasically, everything except the Stage, Cast window, and Scoreby choosing Window > Hide Panels. To show them again, choose Window > Show Panels.
You may want to save several different screen layouts that are suitable for doing different tasks in Directorfor example, one for animation, one for Cast management, and so on.