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Drag the center jog disk left or right.
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Adobe Premiere Pro Help Editing a Sequence
Using Help | Contents | Index Back 156
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Click the timecode display between the views, type a valid timecode number to trim
the edges of both clips to that frame, and press Enter.
•
Select the boxed number above the center jog disk, type a negative number to trim
both clips left or type a positive number to trim both clips right, and press Enter.
•
Click the button that corresponds with the number of frames you want to rolling-edit.
The –1 and –5 buttons trim both clips left; +1 and +5 trim both clips right.
Note: The large trim offset number is 5 frames by default, but you can set it to any number
by specifying a number in the trim preferences.
To cancel an edit:
Press Ctrl+Z, or use the History palette.
To preview the edit:
Click the Play Edit button .
To loop the preview:
Click the Loop button to select the preview; then press the Play Edit button .
To return to the Source/Program view:
Click the close box in the upper right corner of the Trim window.
To set the large frame offset for trimming:
1
Choose Edit > Preferences > Trim.
2
For Large Trim Offset, specify the number of frames that will be trimmed when you use
the Multiple-Frame Trim-in button or the Multiple-Frame Trim-out button (each of
which trim five frames by default).
Previewing a sequence
You can preview all or part of a sequence at any time in the Program view of the Monitor
window. With the proper hardware, you can also display previews on a compatible NTSC
or PAL monitor.
Previewing involves rendering frames of the sequence for playback. Sequences that
consist of cuts between single tracks of video and audio render quickly, whereas
sequences that include layered video and audio and complex effects require more
processing time.
Adobe Premiere Pro’s Real-Time Preview capability renders the frames of the sequence
on
the fly, so that in most cases, previewing simply involves playing the sequence using any
of the controls in the Program view or Timeline window. Adobe Premiere Pro’s Real-Time
Preview supports all Adobe Premiere Pro effects, transitions, transparencies, motion
settings, and titles. When Adobe Premiere Pro can’t achieve the sequence’s full frame
rate,
you have the choice of playing the segment right away at a reduced quality and frame
rate, or waiting to render a preview file, which plays at the full frame rate.
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Adobe Premiere Pro Help Editing a Sequence
Using Help | Contents | Index Back 157
Previewing at the project’s full frame rate
When you set the Program view’s Quality setting to Automatic (see “Choosing a Quality
setting” on page 109), Adobe Premiere Pro dynamically adjusts video quality and frame
rate in order to preview the sequence in real time. During particularly complex sections of
the sequence, or when using a system with inadequate resources, the playback quality