6.4
Table Of Contents
- User’s Guide
- Contents
- Welcome to QuickTime
- Getting Started With QuickTime
- Using QuickTime Player Controls
- Playing Movies in QuickTime Player
- Playing Movies in a Web Browser
- Viewing QuickTime Virtual Reality (VR) Movies
- Adjusting QuickTime Settings
- Viewing and Modifying Still Images
- Using QuickTime to Play MIDI Files
- Finding Movies Quickly Using QuickTime Favorites
- Viewing Information About a File
- QuickTime on the Internet
- Making and Editing QuickTime Movies With QuickTime Pro
- Opening and Converting Files With QuickTime
- Working With Movie Tracks
- Viewing QuickTime Movie Tracks
- Copying a Track From Another QuickTime Movie
- Extracting Individual Tracks
- Disabling Individual Tracks
- Working With Audio Tracks
- Working With Text Tracks
- QuickTime Sprite and Tween Tracks
- Specifying Languages for Individual Tracks
- Changing a Movie’s Appearance With Transparent Tracks
- Editing QuickTime Movies
- Selecting Part of a Movie
- Cutting, Copying, or Deleting a Section of a Movie
- Replacing a Section of a Movie
- Combining Two QuickTime Movies Into One
- Presenting Multiple Movies in the Same Frame
- Adding Special Effects to a QuickTime Movie
- Pasting Graphics and Text Into a Movie
- Resizing, Skewing, or Rotating a Movie
- Changing a Movie’s Shape With a Video Mask
- Adjusting Individual Movie Options
- Advanced Concepts
- Keyboard Combinations forPlayingQuickTimeMovies
- Glossary
- Index
20 Chapter 3 Making and Editing QuickTime Movies With QuickTime Pro
Importing and Exporting 3GPP Files
QuickTime Player can import and play back 3GPP files. To import a file, choose File >
Import.
If you have both the QuickTime 3GPP Component and QuickTime Pro, you can export
video, audio, and text to the 3GPP file format.
To export a file to the 3GPP format:
1 Open the movie you wish to export in QuickTime Player, then choose File > Export.
2 Choose “Movie to 3GPP” from the Export pop-up menu.
You can adjust compression and streaming settings by clicking the Options button.
Creating a Slideshow From Still Images
If you have QuickTime Pro, you can combine a series of still images to create a movie
that plays like a slideshow. This is an easy way to share the pictures from your digital
camera.
Note: Slideshows work best when all the images are the same size.
To create a slideshow from still images:
1 Put all the graphic files you want to include in a folder.
2 Name each file with the same name followed by a number; for example, “picture1,”
“picture2.”
Most digital cameras number files automatically.
3 In QuickTime Player, choose File > Open Image Sequence, then select the first file.
4 Choose a frame rate from the Image Sequence Settings pop-up menu.
QuickTime Pro creates the movie, which shows each picture in sequence.
5 Choose File > Save to name and save the movie.
You can add music to your slideshow by adding an audio track to your movie before
saving it. Import an audio file, select the portion you want to add to the slideshow, and
choose Edit > Copy. Then select the slideshow and choose Edit > Select All, then
choose Edit > Add Scaled.
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