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Converting swf to avi

New Here ,
Dec 13, 2012 Dec 13, 2012

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I have an swf file about 6mb in size. Whenever I try to convert it to avi in flash cs6 I end up with a avi file 4gbs in size that can't be played. Is there a maximum size for an swf to be converted into an avi? I just can't get it to work.

Thanks.

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

LEGEND , Dec 14, 2012 Dec 14, 2012

Exporting from Flash to a format you want to share or utilize usually involves 2 steps.

1, Export a full quality (or very lightly compressed) great looking version of your video.

2, Import into a quality video encoder and compress it to MP4 H.264

When exporting (File->Export->Export Movie), hit the drop-down at the bottom and choose Quicktime (you have to have Quicktime installed, http://www.apple.com/quicktime ).I use QuickTime because all stock AVI and MPEG4 compressors are pretty terrible, exc

...

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LEGEND ,
Dec 13, 2012 Dec 13, 2012

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Are you on a 32bit operating system? If so when you render you can sometimes choose to render to RAM or to disk.

Otherwise I'd hope you're at least on an NTFS filesystem so you don't encounter "max size per single file" issues.

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Adobe Employee ,
Dec 13, 2012 Dec 13, 2012

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Hello,

When you say convert to AVI, could you please tell me the exact steps you are following? If you are working on an FLA within Flash Professional CS6, you could as well export the content to AVI directly - instead of first publishing to SWF and then attempting to convert to AVI. If you still wish to publish to SWF first, and convert to AVI (or any other video format), I suggest that you use Adobe Media Encoder.

Regards,

Suhas Yogin

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LEGEND ,
Dec 13, 2012 Dec 13, 2012

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Do you have any dynamic nature to your animation (code controlling things)?

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New Here ,
Dec 14, 2012 Dec 14, 2012

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Hi

Thanks for all the replies. I'm using win8 and I'm working from the FLA. I go to export and choose avi, then from the drop down menus I pick the quality. I've done it using the lowest setting and I've ended up with the full video but very heavily pixelated and at about 600mb in size.

The video is only 5 mins long.

There's no actionscript the most complicated it gets is the odd tween. There are alot of jpgs (about 120) which I think may affect it.

I'm going to try the media encoder idea if that don't work I'll have to just cut it down, thanks again for the replies, really appreciate it.

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LEGEND ,
Dec 14, 2012 Dec 14, 2012

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Exporting from Flash to a format you want to share or utilize usually involves 2 steps.

1, Export a full quality (or very lightly compressed) great looking version of your video.

2, Import into a quality video encoder and compress it to MP4 H.264

When exporting (File->Export->Export Movie), hit the drop-down at the bottom and choose Quicktime (you have to have Quicktime installed, http://www.apple.com/quicktime ).I use QuickTime because all stock AVI and MPEG4 compressors are pretty terrible, except for Uncompressed (but you get a huge file size).

vid1.jpg

Name your video and click "Save". A new dialog comes up which I was referring to before for rendering via memory or disk:

vid2.jpg

The top green arrow points to rendering in memory or disk. You should select the bottom option as it states it's "for longer movies". I have memory selected in mine so disregard that but remember that setting exists. If you use "On disk" then set the folder it will use to export to if you desire (using alternate hard drives can give performance bumps).

Click the QuickTime Settings button the bottom green arrow points toward. That brings up settings:

vid3.jpg

Mine is set to Uncompressed ("None" compression) but that will generate the huge file, just like AVI Uncompressed did. We don't want that. Audio below is unchecked for me (I have no audio in it) but either way you should leave audio Uncompressed anyhow and make sure it's checked if you have audio in your movie.

Next click the Settings button the arrow points to.

vid4.jpg

The important parts are pointed to. Choose the "Animation" codec which is lossless at full quality but still compresses slightly. I still set the quality down to 90. Make sure colors are set to "Millions of Colors" and not "Millions of Colors+". The + sign means encode an alpha channel so don't use that. Set keyframing to Automatic as it does a decent job. If it doesn't you can set that to keyframe every 1 second to be really aggressive but it adds to file size.

Click OK.

You return back to Settings but notice the size of the video is wrong.

vid5.jpg

Click the size button, you get this dialog:

vid6.jpg

Change it to "Current" and you'll see the document size is your Flash document size.

Now after you press OK you won't see this take effect immediately, it may still say the wrong size, but it did work. To verify simply hit the OK button on Settings, then re-open QuickTime Settings again and it will say the correct size.

vid7.jpg

You're done with settings, click OK. Now you're on the first panel. Click the Export button.

After you're done with this you're going to want to take the .MOV file this generates (which should be great quality but a pretty big file size) and import it into your favorite encoder (Adobe Media Ecoder, Sorenson Squeeze, etc).

I'll use AME because you mentioned it.

Load Adobe Media Encoder (mine is CS5.5 yours may look different from what I'm describing). Import the video (click the [+] sign at the top next to Queue).

In the Format column hit the [\/] drop-down button and choose H.264.

In the Preset column you can click the drop-down and take a shot at the existing presets. If none really match up, close that drop-down and click the yellow link name of the preset it's currently on. That opens up settings for the preset.

The recipe for a good video differs video to video. On this part I can only tell you the basics. For sheer ease I'm going to suggest a 4.2 profile setting (you'll see in a minute) so you can access the most common settings used.

In the settings box, on the right:

Choose the "Multiplexer" tab and make sure it's set to "MP4". Stream Compatibility to "Standard".

Choose the "Video" tab. Look at the bottom of the Basic Video Settings and set the "Level" to 4.2. This is for basic full HD video but it also opens up a lot of otherwise locked options. At the top of that area set your videos resolution. Choose the proper frame rate below that. Set the "Pixel Aspect Ratio" to "Square Pixels". The "Profile" should be "Main". Bitrate settings is where you'll be playing most of the time. For under 1280x720 video I'd play around a minimum of 2Mbps and Max of 4Mbps. For 1280x720 mini HD I'd choose around min 3Mbps max 5Mbps. For full HD I'd probably choose 6Mbps min 10Mbps max.

If you have audio, choose the "Audio" tab. Typically for computer/net playback I'd set the "Frequency" to highly compatible "44.1Khz". The "Bitrate [kbps]" is up to you at this point. If high fidelity audio is pinnacle to the video then choose around 256-320. Otherwise It's somewhat difficult to tell the difference between 128-192. For anything on the web I never go over 128. The bitrate you set for a long video will greatly affect the overall file size. You may want to export a 128kbit version then a 320kbit version to see how huge the difference is.

Settings are done, get out of settings and click the play button to start the encoding queue.

Test your MP4 when it's done encoding and make changes as necessary. Too much "blockiness" and compression in the video? Increase the min/max Bitrate. Same with audio.

The good thing is you continue to have a high quality Quicktime source you can encode multiple times until you get the settings just right.

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New Here ,
Dec 14, 2012 Dec 14, 2012

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Wow. That's what I call help, thank you. I managed to get it done.

It's up here:
The Audi Spin - YouTube

Thanks again.

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LEGEND ,
Dec 14, 2012 Dec 14, 2012

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You're welcome and good luck! (Audi A8 may be in my future, tired of Hemi)

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New Here ,
Nov 01, 2014 Nov 01, 2014

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-- advertisement removed --

[Edited by: sinious]

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LEGEND ,
Nov 04, 2014 Nov 04, 2014

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The OP wanted to export from Flash, not purchase a 3rd party application for $45. I am removing your post content as I feel it is merely an off-topic unsafe product advertisement.

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New Here ,
Jun 23, 2015 Jun 23, 2015

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When I click file > export > export movie > I don't even get the .AVI option in fla css6.whatavi.jpg

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LEGEND ,
Jun 23, 2015 Jun 23, 2015

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Do you have Apple Quicktime installed? If not you should install it.

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LEGEND ,
Jun 23, 2015 Jun 23, 2015

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Something to think about, Flash 9 to Flash CS6 did export to video in real time. If your scene is demanding you will get frames that last too long, even quite jerky at times.

If at some point you can update to Flash Pro CC, then you can have the most complex animation on earth, and still get perfect frame rate exports.

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New Here ,
Jun 23, 2015 Jun 23, 2015

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What I am using now is the Adobe Flash Professional CC and Mobile Device Packaging (2015). Downloaded this from the Creative Cloud (That I hate, just so you know). It also installed the Media encoder CC (2015). What I used to use and with I still did, was the cs5 flash. It was so simple. All I had to do was drag a .Tiff file to import it, drag it over to my template, click File > Export > Export Movie > Select .AVI and the destination. Then I was able to compress, choose mpeg 4 codec v3, set my data rate to 4K and I was done. Simple. Literally took 2 minutes. Now I have spent 2 days on this and still can't export a .AVI file.

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LEGEND ,
Jun 23, 2015 Jun 23, 2015

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Things are as easy now, and you end up with much better quality, and perfect frame rate.

Instead of looking for QuickTime or AVI under Export/Movie, do an Export/Video. You can have it automatically compressed to MP4 with Adobe Media Encoder, or just export it full quality and take the MOV file into AME (or any other encoder you might prefer). The advantage is that you can then compress different versions or try different quality settings, without having to render the animation from Flash over and over.

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