Editing¶
Move¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
G
Pressing G moves the all selected strip(s). Move your mouse horizontally (left/right) to change the strip's position in time. Move vertically (up/down) to change channels.
Holding down Ctrl while dragging snaps to the start and endpoints of other strips. The position of the mouse relative to the selection influences where the strips are snapped. If it is closer to the start of the selection, then the start frame of the selection gets snapped, else the end frame will get snapped.
To "ripple edit" (make room for strips you drag) hold Alt when placing a strip.
You can also lock the direction to time with X or to change the strip's channel with Y.
It is possible to move strips using mouse by dragging them while holding LMB. Currently it is possible to move only 1 strip by dragging
Start Frame Offset¶
The start frame offset for that strip could be selected by clicking LMB on the left arrow of the strip; holding it down (or pressing G and then moving the mouse left/right) changes the start frame within the strip by the number of frames you move it. The frame number label under the strip displays the start frame of the strip.
If you have a 20-image sequence strip, and drag the left arrow to the right by 10 frames, the strip will start at image 11 (images 1 to 10 will be skipped). Use this to clip off a roll-up or undesired lead-in.
Dragging the left arrow left will create a lead-in (copies) of the first frame for as many frames as you drag it. Use this when you want some frames for a transition at the start of the clip.
End Frame¶
The end frame of the strip could be selected by clicking LMB on the right arrow of the strip; holding it down (or pressing G) and then moving the mouse changes the ending frame within the strip. The frame number label over the strip displays the end frame of the strip.
Dragging the right arrow to the left shortens the clip; any original images at the tail are ignored. Use this to quickly clip off a roll-down.
Dragging the right arrow to the right extends the clip. For movies and images sequences, more of the animation is used until exhausted. Extending a clip beyond its length will render as a copy of the last image. Use this for transitions out of this clip.
注釈
Multiple selection
You can select several (handles of) strips by Shift-LMB clicking: when you press G, everything that is selected will move with your mouse -- this means that, for example, you can at the same time move a strip, shorten two others, and extend a forth one.
Move/Extend from Frame¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
E
With a number of strips selected, pressing E lets you interactively extend the strips. This is similar to moving but is useful for extending (or shortening) time around the current frame.
All selected strip handles to the "mouse side" of the current frame indicator will transform together, so you can change the duration of the current frame.
Slip Strip Content¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
S
The Slip tool allows you to change the position of the contents of a strip without moving the strip itself.
Snap Strips¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
Shift-S
Position your playhead (vertical blue line) to the time you want. Snap to current frame to start a strip exactly at the beginning of the frame. If your Time display is in seconds, you can get to fractional parts of a second by zooming the display; you can get all the way down to an individual frame.
Set Frame Range¶
Reference
- Menu
Sets the frame range of preview to the range of the selected strips.
Duplicate Strips¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
Shift-D
Duplicate a strip to make an unlinked copy; drag it to a time and channel, and drop it by LMB click.
Separate Images¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
Y
For images sequence only -- Converts the strip into multiple strips, one strip for each frame. Useful for slide shows and other cases where you want to bring in a set on non-continuous images.
- Length
You have to specify the duration you want the resulting strips will be.
Cut¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
K
This cuts the selected strip in two at the current frame. This will result in two strips which use the same source, fitting the original strip's timing and length.
ヒント
This can be thought of as a quick way to duplicate the current strip, adjusting the start/end frames to form two non-overlapping strips showing the same content as before.
Hold Cut¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
Shift-K
Like Cut, it cuts a strip in two distinct strips; however you will not be able to drag the endpoints to show the frames past the cut of each resulting strip.
Although you can adjust the Hold Offset number fields in the Strip Info panel.
ヒント
This can be thought of as a way to simulate splitting the video file in two parts at the cut-point, replacing the current strip with each.
Mute¶
- Mute/Unmute Strips H, Alt-H
Mute or unmute the selected strips.
- Mute/Unmute Deselected Strips Shift-H, Ctrl-Alt-H
Mute or unmute all strips but the selected.
Change¶
The Change sequence operator modifies the file path or effect inputs/type on active strip.
- Effect
Switch the effects on a selected Effect strip.
- Path/Files
Changes the source file contained in a selected strip.
Reassign Inputs¶
Reference
- Menu
- Hotkey
R
This tool can be used to assign (reconnect) effect strips in a different way. Just select three arbitrary strips and press R. If you don't create a cycle, those will be connected to a new effect chain.
The Strip menu contains additional tools for working with strips:
Insert/Remove Gap
Deinterlace Movies
Set Render Size
Reload Strips
Swap Inputs
Lock Strips
Unlock Strips
Swap Strips
Fades¶
Reference
- Menu
This submenu contains tools to add or remove fades to strips. In case of visual strips the tools will animate the opacity or volume in case of audio strips.
- Clear Fades
Removes fade animation from selected sequences.
- Fade In And Out
Fade selected strips in and out.
- Fade In
Fade in selected strips.
- Fade Out
Fade out selected strips.
- From Playhead
Fade from the playhead to the end of overlapping sequences.
- To Playhead
Fade from the start of sequences under the playhead to the current frame.