At least partly getting back to the original poster's questions...
Frank Mendonça wrote: I export the shapes from Corel 10 in AI 8 format, with outlines, RGB, but still I can´t get it right.
Hello Frank,
does Corel 10 allow you to choose an AI version earlier than 8

AI7 works fairly well for me from a few other apps (the AI7 specs were made widely available by Adobe). If my vague memory serves me correctly, it was around AI8 or AI9 that some fairly serious incompatible changes were introduced to the AI format, but there were ongoing changes even before that.
In
this thread, while mainly discussing imported point density, if you go through to the SWF example, I posted a partial view of a quick example of exporting from Expression into Moho via AI7 - simple colours and shapes (including outlines) were reasonably well preserved in spite of the approximation (and I was using Expression's B-spline drawing tool, so I probably had a conversion from Expression's B-spline to AI's variable handle Bezier to Moho equal-handled Bezier, and I can no longer remember which uses quadratic Bezier curves and with uses cubic Bezier curves).
Notes on what transfers:
Simple flat fills, yes (and some programs can be, umm, tricky about whether they are really exporting RGB or CMYK colours inside an AI file, in spite of the mode you used to choose the colour in the program). Gradients, patterns, meshes, and other fancy fill types, no. I think outline import is similarly only supported for simple non-variable-width single-colour outlines. I've only tested this with AI7 export from Xara X and Expression, where the results when importing into Moho are usually quite good (see the sample imported outlines in the last slides of the SWF file referred to in the thread mentioned above).
I suspect shapes may continue be an approximation, not only due to different curve mathematics, but in order to get reliable animation - I've used a 3D spline animation program where you could alter the node handles which looked great while modeling, but when used with bone and point animation could lead to distortion results which were ... unexpected.
Frank Mendonça wrote:Another question is: is it possible to set the outline (and the fill) for an AI file imported? I tried to, but it doesn´t seem to work.
I've seen at least one vector program that didn't properly close vector shapes in AI export

- it just placed the last point over the first point and didn't "weld" the two together, so Moho couldn't fill it. Moho includes an Auto Weld script to fix this problem.

If you've already got a fill, the select shape should let you play with the outline settings (make sure you are on frame 0, you haven't hidden that section of the outline, and - my usual mistake - you have a line width set to greater than 0).
However, the non-closed shape is really a fill issue

- I haven't yet seen a problem with fills without outlines (except where I'd set the line width to 0 myself

) - perhaps you could post a sample Moho file containing un-outlinable shapes?
As long as you apply special outline features (such as brushes and variable width lines) within Moho I haven't yet seen many problems, although I'll admit I do most of my drawing inside Moho

rather than importing, and I work in a limited hobbyist environment.
Trying to transfer special program-specific features across programs is where you run into trouble, and brushes used on outlines are a prime example.

Of course, this is not a Moho problem, you'll run into exactly the same problems when trying to move program-specific features like brushes on outlines between non-animating illustration programs, such as Expression's vector brushes or Illustrator's Artistic brushes.
The same usually applies to, for example, gradients in many illustration programs - elliptical, conical, and diamond fills, for example. Not to mention such features as gradient transparency, automatic drop-shadows, and bevels.

There's still a lot you can't rely on to be cross-compatible in the vector world - bitmap/raster compatibility is so much more reliable, which is why some publishers and printers prefer TIFF files for final output.
Regards, Myles - disillusioned about cross-program compatibility long before Moho.
