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Sothink SWF Decompiler for Mac is a professional SWF to FLA, SWF to FLEX project converter on Mac OS X. It supports Flash 6, Flash MX 2004 , Flash 8, Flash CS3 and Flash CS4. The Flash Decompiler Mac is compatible with Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard.
Who Needs Sothink SWF Decompiler for MAC?
You do if you’ve ever:
- Needed to work on a Flash animation, and you only have the compiled SWF file.
- Downloaded an SWF file from the internet and wanted to extract a specific element from it.
- Needed a solution to export ActionScript files.
SWF Decompiler for MAC Lets You
- Easily recover FLA files from compiled Flash animations in SWF format..
- Extract individual elements and resources such as shapes, sounds, images, sprites, fonts, texts, and more.
- Export ActionScript files in AS and HTML formats.
- Preview Flash movies.
- Decompile SWF files to Flex projects.

User’s Testimonial
by Lee Brimelow from Adobe
I just got word that my favorite decompiler is now available for OS X! I’m really starting to run out of reasons to use Windows at this point. I’ve done some basic tests with this version and everything seems to work exactly the same way as the Windows version. No more having to use VMWare or Parallels simply to decompile something. Good news!
by download.com
Every element in a Flash movie is fodder for Sothink SWF Decompiler. It breaks Flash down into its component parts, including sound, images, fonts, buttons, and even action scripts. We expect Sothink SWF Decompiler to be useful mainly to designers, but it’s simple enough for computer-savvy home users who want to pull music or graphics from their favorite Flash movies.
More Details At
http://www.sothink.com/product/flash-decompiler-for-mac/index.htm
This weekend’s ZOT? Dec 12th and 13th
Mellel
Mellel is an advanced word processor for Mac OS X designed especially for scholars, creative and technical writers, and anyone seeking a feature-rich and reliable word processor.
Learn more about it here… |
December 11th, 2009 at 7:39 am
This has been an incredibly useful application for our team. We occasionally get compiled Flash files that the client wants to edit, but the previous consultants didn’t see fit to leave the source files. It’s worth it at $79.99: today’s ZOT is a steal.
December 11th, 2009 at 9:53 am
How well does it work? Have you found many glitches with it or does it decompile fairly accurately?
December 11th, 2009 at 12:24 pm
I’ve used it several times and have been very happy with the accuracy of the results.