If we could have Animated PNG support replace Gif or supplement as a animated option. This would be excellent in my opinion. As APNG is superior in nearly every way.
Just thinking out loud.

Moderator: Klaus
Yes, and APNG supportFourthWorld wrote:It would be even cooler if we could have all animated file formats displayed asynchronously. Right now, animated GIFs stop looping during script execution and some other activities, sorely lowering the value of using them.
One key difference between LC and Firefox is that Firefox has to support things that are also supported by other browsers, whereas LiveCode only has to support things that run in LiveCode.endernafi wrote:This leaves the company alone who tries to support that underrated technology.
It's hard to support a technology all alone.
Coding and maintaining libraries/frameworks of this scale is hard and requires vast resources.
Even Mozilla community has secondary thoughts about apng nowadays, have a look at bugzilla.
I hope so. SVG is increasingly important. Now that LC is using the Skia graphics engine under the hood, I suspect SVG support would be easier now than ever before. Fingers crossed.Svg is another story; it's being already actively developed by hundreds if not thousands of developers.
So, all RunRev has to do is finding a way to integrate it into the engine
and keeping it neat, maintaining, updating, fixing minor consistency issues.
An opportunity lost, IMO. NeXT was quite cutting-edge when it premiered in 1988, but BeOS' extended metadata and fully integrated Unicode were quite remarkable, and arguably may have accelerated many types of app development that would be unique to the platform - that is, not easily reproduced on other platforms thereby providing a marketing advantage to the company bundling the OS with their hardware.Unfortunately, being better than others doesn't always result with success.
Anyone remember BeOS?
What an excellent piece of code it was, way ahead of its time.
NextOS was just bloatware compared to it, in my opinion.
However, it was NextOS who succeeded and came to these days.
EcmaScript was just another language, there isn't any jaw-breaking, paradigm-changing aspect of it.richmond62 wrote:Pity, really.