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
4
33
4 Advanced Concepts
The activities in this chapter apply only to QuickTime Pro.
You can upgrade to QuickTime Pro by purchasing a
registration key at www.apple.com/quicktime/buy.
Making a Movie Self-Contained
When you save a movie the usual way, the movie file contains only pointers to data in
your movie folder. If you want to transfer the movie without worrying about links, you
can create a “self-contained” movie that includes all the data (video, audio, and so on)
you used to create the movie within a single file.
Note: You must have QuickTime Pro to export and save movies.
To save a self-contained movie:
1 In QuickTime Player, choose File > Save As.
2 Select “Make movie self-contained” and click Save.
To determine whether any pointers remain in the movie, choose Movie > Get Movie
Properties, and then choose Files from the right pop-up menu. If additional files appear
in the list, the movie has pointers and is not self-contained.
Changing Playback Options
You can change playback options such as the size at which a movie plays and whether
the QuickTime Player window shows. You can also optimize movies for playback on
certain computers. (See “Creating Reference Movies to Optimize Web Playback” on
page 18.)
Changing Movie Size for Playback
QuickTime Player includes several options for changing movie playback size. QuickTime
Pro provides additional playback options, such as setting the screen so that only the
movie, and not the QuickTime Player window, is visible (known as Full Screen mode).
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