Adobe 25520578 User Guide - Page 162

Subclips, About subclips

Page 162 highlights

ADOBE PREMIERE PRO CS3 156 User Guide Nest a sequence in another sequence ❖ Drag a sequence from the Project panel or Source Monitor into the appropriate track or tracks of the active sequence, or use any of the editing methods for adding a clip. Note: You will not have to render audio before editing a nested sequence. Open the source of a nested sequence ❖ Double-click a nested sequence clip. The source of the nested sequence becomes the active sequence. Reveal a source frame from a nested sequence If you want to reveal a clip in a nested sequence (for example, to edit it), you can quickly open the source sequence at the exact frame you want to reveal. 1 In the Timeline panel, activate the track in which a nested sequence is located by clicking the header of that track. 2 Drag the current-time indicator to the frame of the nested sequence that you want to reveal in its original sequence. 3 Press Shift+T to open the source sequence in the Timeline panel, with the current-time indicator at the frame you specified in the nested sequence. 4 Double-click the clip where the current-time indicator rests to open the clip in the Source Monitor. Subclips About subclips A subclip is a section of a master (source) clip that you want to edit and manage separately in your project. You can use subclips to organize long media files. You work with subclips in the Timeline panel like you do a master clip. Trimming and editing a subclip is constrained by its start and end points, but you can adjust it to include more or less of the master clip. Subclips reference the master clip's media file. If you delete or take a master clip offline and keep its media on disk, the subclip and its instance remain online. If you take the original media off disk, the subclip and its instances go offline. If you relink a master clip, its subclips remain linked to the original media. If you recapture or relink a subclip, it is promoted to a master clip, and all ties to the original media are broken. The recaptured media includes the subclip's referenced portion of the media only. Any instances of the subclip are relinked to the recaptured media. To use a master clip and its subclips in another project, import the project that contains the clips. See also "Source clips, clip instances, and subclips" on page 101 April 1, 2008

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ADOBE PREMIERE PRO CS3
User Guide
156
N
est a sequence in another sequence
Drag a sequence from the Project panel or Source Monitor into the appropriate track or tracks of the active
sequence, or use any of the editing methods for adding a clip.
Note:
You will not have to render audio before editing a nested sequence.
O
pen the source of a nested sequence
Double-click a nested sequence clip. The source of the nested sequence becomes the active sequence.
Reveal a source frame from a nested sequence
If you want to reveal a clip in a nested sequence (for example, to edit it), you can quickly open the source sequence
at the exact frame you want to reveal.
1
In the Timeline panel, activate the track in which a nested sequence is located by clicking the header of that track.
2
Drag the current-time indicator to the frame of the nested sequence that you want to reveal in its original
sequence.
3
Press Shift+T to open the source sequence in the Timeline panel, with the current-time indicator at the frame you
specified in the nested sequence.
4
Double-click the clip where the current-time indicator rests to open the clip in the Source Monitor.
Subclips
About subclips
A subclip is a section of a master (source) clip that you want to edit and manage separately in your project. You can
use subclips to organize long media files.
You work with subclips in the Timeline panel like you do a master clip. Trimming and editing a subclip is
constrained by its start and end points, but you can adjust it to include more or less of the master clip.
Subclips reference the master clip’s media file. If you delete or take a master clip offline and keep its media on disk,
the subclip and its instance remain online. If you take the original media off disk, the subclip and its instances go
offline. If you relink a master clip, its subclips remain linked to the original media.
If you recapture or relink a subclip, it is promoted to a master clip, and all ties to the original media are broken. The
recaptured media includes the subclip’s referenced portion of the media only. Any instances of the subclip are
relinked to the recaptured media.
To use a master clip and its subclips in another project, import the project that contains the clips.
See also
Source clips, clip instances, and subclips
” on page
101
April 1, 2008