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I would think it’s easier to perform similar to the Splitting above. Ok, so… New track, added audio, now the audio needs shrinking, fully intact, to match the length of the video. Allow them to be moved and/or place them in ascending order somehow as a file manager would do if clicking it’s name header.The current heights are not space friendly for single monitors. In the Tracks Header, the horizontal line dividing tracks could allow adjustment, as most DAW’s do. Shrinking/Stretching - I’ve just added a new track, incidentally, two requests here: This means the audio needed time-stretching to fit. However, they are different lengths due to the first being recorded from VHS by the look of it. The English dubbed version is very poor quality and the Chinese one is great. Perhaps this is a fairly unique scenario? But one film I have - Five Superfighters - is a real problem. The trouble from my pov is that one track is Chinese and one dubbed in English! Meaning very different spikes in the audio. Spike Sync - This only works if the two tracks are identical or very similar. This adds to the frustration of getting on with whatever it is you’re trying to achieve. Something this basic shouldn’t be a task, it should be intuitive.
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This then makes it a task to find out how exactly to create a new track to add the audio inline with the video instead of at the end of it. Though I just tried this with audio and it appended the current track, ie, put the audio at the end instead of creating a new track below the current video file. Remember, frame accuracy isn’t always a requirementĭrag clips to Timeline - Sorry, I should’ve thought of that one! Thanks for the tip MuLab offers a similar option of reversal in a similar area I believe. Perhaps CTRL+click to drag and a simple drag allows selection would be better? With an option to reverse this. Though, now I think about it, I can see why that works as it does. When I tried the former method, it just drags the whole clip to a new position. I had to use the preview and use the back/forward buttons to select a point marking. I imagined, like an audio editor, that you simply select a part of the waveform and select cut. Splitting - When splitting, it was difficult to understand how this was achieved.
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But It’s NOT the buttons that need them, it’s things like dropdown boxes, numerical values, checkboxes, etc. Tooltips - Just as an example, MKVToolNix has Tooltips which greatly helped me learn the best settings to use. My apologies if I offended anyone with my comments, I admit I’m not the best at explaining my am on Win10圆4 with the latest release of Shotcut.
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Understandably, these are meant for more experienced, even professional users, I just don’t see why they are so needlessly difficult to “pick up” for those new to the arena. It seems all the programs that do what I require are seriously lacking in ease of use for the layman.
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I knew it would be a steep learning curve for me, but you look at some video software and it’s easy to use, but wholly ineffective for my needs. I’ve had these video files for around 7-10 years and have wanted to sort them out for so long. I’m just a dabbler, just trying out something I knew was going to be a major pain to learn. Not all of us went to college/university or are big media fanatics that spend all their time with this kind of program. I simply joined to point out that as a newcomer, things could be easier.
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I think this software is bloody amazing and anyone who spends time creating this sort of stuff for free deserves immense respect.
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Wow! that’s some response! Sorry, look, I know I’m new and I know that joining a forum and making criticism isn’t the way to make “friends.” I didn’t come here to be an asshole. The major thing missing from YouTube snippet videos is “how does it all tie together for a start-to-finish workflow”. You and and maybe and and and others could take other sections so nobody is overloaded. I could offer to do the export settings section, for instance. If we spread the load around several people, hopefully it could be kept up to date. Then, as updates happen in Shotcut, maybe only a few videos would need to be updated at a time. Would there be value in identifying 20 of the most common and super-basic Shotcut actions, and making a walk-thru video of each one as a new user orientation? The topics could describe a simple and progressive workflow from importing clips to exporting the result (nothing too fancy yet), and introduce vernacular along the way so viewers learn what to search for when they want more information. We have several talented tutorial creators in the forum (yourself included of course).