User Manual

Table Of Contents
Keyframe Editing Using the Time Editor
A drop-down and editing field at the bottom right of the Keyframes Editor lets you numerically
edit the timing, in frames, of any selected keyframe, making it easy to make precise
adjustments.
To change the position of a keyframe using the toolbar, do one of the following:
Select a keyframe, and then enter a new frame number in the Time Edit box.
Choose T Offset from the Time Editor drop-down, select one or more keyframes, and
enter a frame offset.
Choose T Scale from the Time Editor drop-down, select one or more keyframes, and
enter a frame offset.
The Time button can switch to Time Offset or Time Scale for moving keyframes.
The Keyframe Spreadsheet
If you turn on the Spreadsheet and then click on the name of a layer in the keyframe track, the
numeric time position and value (or values if it’s a multi-dimensional parameter) of each
keyframe appear as entries in the cells of the Spreadsheet. Each column represents one
keyframe, while each row represents a single aspect of each keyframe.
Editing keyframes in the Spreadsheet.
For example, if you’re animating a blur, then the Key Frame row shows the frame each keyframe
is positioned at, and the Blur1BlurSize row shows the blur size at each keyframe. If you change
the Key Frame value of any keyframe, you’ll move that keyframe to a new frame of the Timeline.
Duplicating Spline Keyframes
Keyframes can be duplicated, either onto the same keyframe track or onto different tracks. This
can save you time if you need to repeat a keyframe sequence at another time on the same
segment, or even just create identically-timed keyframes on two different segments.
To duplicate keyframes, do the following:
1 Select one or more keyframes you want to duplicate.
2 Hold Command and drag one of the selected keyframes to a new position.
Chapter – 60 Animating in Fusion’sKeyframes Editor 1203