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ensure
that
no
changes
were
made
to
the
video
is
to
use
the
same
project
preset
for
export
that
was
used
for
import,
which
is
the
default
behavior
in
Adobe
Premiere
Pro.
‐
There
is
one
exception
to
exporting
with
the
source
codec:
when
the
source
is
DV25
and
contains
a
number
of
motion
graphics
or
compositing.
‐
When
you
preprocess,
choose
the
highest
frame
rate
and
largest
frame
size
that
you
will
use.
If
you
are
targeting
web
codecs,
use
square
pixels
(pixel
aspect
ratio
of
1).
Æ
Choosing
a
file
format
for
rendering
‐
The
most
common
formats
are
QuickTime
and
AVI;
both
offer
good
‐
quality
intermediate
codecs.
‐
You
can
also
use
MPEG
‐
2
at
high
data
rates.
‐
It
is
essential
to
make
sure
that
the
encoding
tool
supports
the
file
format.
Æ
Choosing
a
codec
for
exporting
‐
When
you
export
an
intermediate
file,
pick
a
codec
and
a
data
rate
that
doesn’t
introduce
compression
artifacts.
‐
When
you
are
not
preprocessing,
it’s
typical
to
use
the
source
codec
or
Motion
JPEG.
When
you
use
Motion
JPEG,
use
it
in
single
field
when
you
export
as
progressive
scan,
or
interlaced
when
you
export
as
interlaced.
‐
For
AVI
files
on
Windows,
the
Huffyuv
codec
is
quite
popular.
Understanding
preprocessing
‐
Preprocessing
is
the
middle
step
of
video
compression
and
involves
transforming
the
decoded
frame
of
the
source
video
into
the
optimized
frame
given
to
the
codec.
–
Goal
=
to
transform
the
video
into
the
final
format.
‐
Preprocessing
is
very
important
for
quality,
and
getting
it
right
can
dramatically
improve
the
quality
of
the
final
video.
A
well
preprocessed
video
can
look
better
than
the
same
source
file
poorly
preprocessed,
but
can
be
encoded
at
twice
the
data
rate.
Содержание XL1 3CCD
Страница 54: ......