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Drag video and audio to a sequence
By
default, when dropped into a sequence, the video and audio components
of linked clips appear in corresponding tracks (for example, Video
1 and Audio 1), unless the audio channel type of the clip is incompatible
with the target track. In this case, the linked audio appears in
the next compatible track, or a compatible track is created automatically.
Note: An
audio clip dragged to an incompatible track automatically shifts
to the next compatible track, even if the track is occupied by another
audio clip. Therefore, take care not to disturb clips already in
the sequence.
However, you can alter this behavior by holding
the Shift key while you drag.
The Program Monitor can help
you determine where to position a clip you’re adding to a sequence.
During an overlay edit, it displays the frames in the sequence adjacent
to the new clip’s head and tail. During an insert edit, it displays
the frames adjacent to the insertion point.
- Open
a clip in the Source Monitor, and mark its In and Out points. (See Working with In and Out points.)
 If you don’t want to set In and Out points,
you can drag the clip directly from a bin or the preview thumbnail
in the Project panel.
- To make clip edges align when you drag them, make sure
that the Snap button
is
active in a Timeline panel.
- Do one of the following:
To drag the video and audio portions of
a clip to specific tracks, drag the clip from the Project panel
or from the main viewing area of the Source Monitor into a Timeline.
When the video portion of the clip lies above the desired video track,
press and hold Shift. Continue holding shift, and drag downward
past the bar separating video and audio tracks. When the audio portion
of the clip lies above the desired audio track, release the mouse
and release Shift.
To drag the video portion of a clip to the Video
1 track and the audio to any audio track, drag the clip past the
line that separates the video tracks from the audio tracks, and
drop the clip above the audio track where you want the audio portion
to land. The video portion of the clip will remain in the Video
1 track, and the audio portion lands in the desired audio track.
To
perform an overlay edit, drag the clip from the Source Monitor to
an appropriate track in a Timeline panel at the point you want the
clip to start. The destination area is highlighted, and the pointer
appears with the Overlay icon .
To perform
an insert edit, Ctrl‑drag (Windows) or Command-drag (Mac OS) the clip
from the Source Monitor to an appropriate track in a Timeline panel
at the point you want the clip to start. The destination area is
highlighted, and the pointer appears with the Insert icon . Arrows
appear at the insertion point in all tracks.
To perform an insert edit and shift only target
tracks, Ctrl+Alt‑drag (Windows) or Command+Option-drag (Mac OS)
the clip from the Source Monitor to an appropriate track in a Timeline
panel at the point you want the clip to start. The destination area
is highlighted, and the pointer appears with the Insert icon . Arrows
appear at the insertion point only in the tracks to which the clip
is added.
To zoom into or out of a clip as you drop it into
a Timeline panel, drag and press the equal sign key (=) to increase
the zoom factor or press the minus sign key (–) to decrease it.
Do not use the keys on the number pad.
The clip will land in a Timeline panel, the current-time
indicator will jump to the beginning of the clip, and a Timeline
panel will become active, making it easy to playback the clip just
added to the sequence.
Note: You
can also drag, or Ctrl-drag (Windows) or Command-drag (Mac OS),
a clip into the Program Monitor to overlay or insert a clip. Make
sure the track you want is targeted in a Timeline panel and the
current‑time indicator is at the location where you want to add
the clip in the sequence. To prevent an insert edit from shifting
clips in any track, turn off Sync Lock for that track, or alternatively,
lock the track.
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