User Manual

Table Of Contents
To open a clip into the Source Viewer using the mouse:
Double-click any clip in the Media Pool, or in the Filmstrip of the Media Pool, to open it
into the Source Viewer.
To open a clip into the Source Viewer using the keyboard:
1 If necessary, press Command-1 to select the Bin list, and press the Up and Down arrows
to choose a folder to view its contents. Press the Right Arrow key to open folders and
show any nested folders within, or the Left Arrow key to close folders and hide their
nested contents.
2 Press Command-2 to select the Media Pool browser, and use the Arrow keys to change
the selection from clip to clip in the Media Pool, up, down, left, and right.
3 When the clip you want is highlighted, press Return to open it into the Source Viewer.
To open a timeline into the Source Viewer:
Drag and drop any timeline into the Source Viewer in preparation for either ganging it
to the existing Timeline, or editing it, in whole or in part using In and Out points, into the
currently open Timeline.
Monitoring with an External Video Display
While working in the Edit page, the image that’s displayed on an external video display
(if one is connected) is determined either by the current selection in the Media Pool, or
by which part of the Edit page interface has focus. For example, if you select a clip in
the Media Pool so it’s displayed within the Filmstrip, that clip is output to video. If you
then open it into the Source Viewer, then the contents of the Source Viewer are output
to video. If you switch to the Timeline Viewer, then your timeline is output to video.
Viewer Transport Controls
The Edit page has two Viewers. The left Viewer, when you’re editing, should be set to show
either source video or source audio, so it shows the source clip in any edit you’re setting up. At
right is the Timeline Viewer, that shows the frame at the current position of the playhead in the
Timeline. Using the Source and Timeline Viewers, you can set up a wide variety of edits.
There are identical transport controls underneath each of the Viewers.
The transport controls at the bottom of the Source Viewer
A jog bar appears directly underneath the transport controls, letting you drag the playhead
directly with the pointer. The full width of the Source Viewer’s jog bar represents the full
duration of a clip, while the full width of the Timeline Viewer’s jog bar represents the full
duration of the current timeline. The current position of each playhead is shown in the timecode
field at the upper right-hand corner of each viewer.
Chapter – 27 Preparing Clips for Editing and Viewer Playback 556