User Manual

Table Of Contents
The viewers have a variety of capabilities you can use to compare and evaluate images. This
section provides a short overview of viewer capabilities to get you started.
Zooming and Panning into Viewers
There are standardized methods of zooming into and panning around viewers when you need a
closer look at the situation. These methods also work with the Node Editor, Spline Editor, and
Keyframes Editor.
Methods of panning viewers:
Middle-click and drag to pan around the viewer.
Hold down Shift and Command and drag the viewer to pan.
Drag with two fingers on a track pad to pan.
Methods of scaling viewers:
Click a viewer, and press the equals key (=) to zoom in, and the minus key (-)
to zoom out.
Press the middle and left mouse buttons simultaneously and drag left or right to resize
the viewer.
Hold down the Command key and use your pointer’s scroll control to zoom in and out
of the viewer.
Hold down the middle mouse button, and then click the left mouse button to zoom in,
or click the right button to zoom out. The scaling uses a fixed amount, centered on the
position of the cursor.
Click a viewer and press Command-1 to resize the image in the viewer to 100 percent.
Click a viewer and press Command-F to reset the image in the viewer to fit the viewer.
Click the Scale viewer menu and choose Fit or a percentage.
Right-click on a viewer and choose an option from the Scale submenu of the
contextual menu. This includes a Custom Scale command that lets you type your own
scale percentage.
Hold down the Command key and drag with two fingers on a track pad to zoom in and
out of the viewer.
Methods of spinning 3D viewers:
In 3D Perspective view, hold down the Shift key and drag to spin the stage around.
In 3D Perspective view, hold down the Shift key and drag with two fingers on a track
pad to spin the stage around.
Loading Nodes Into Viewers
When you first open the Fusion page in DaVinci Resolve, the output of the current empty
composition (the MediaOut1 node) is usually showing in viewer 2. If you’re in Dual-viewer mode,
viewer 1 remains empty until you assign a node to one of them.
When using Fusion Studio, nothing is loaded into either of the viewers until you assign a node
to one of them.
Chapter – 53 Exploring the Fusion Interface 975