This has been driving me bonkers for days. Hopefully someone will know what I'm talking about, explain it to me and stop the madness developing inside me.
Ok, I'm going to pick a random spot on my timeline: 00:03:02:00
According to people in this forum, if I hold down the alt key and press the up arrow key it should zoom me in on the timeline to a point where each hash mark now represents one frame (holding the alt key should keep me from zooming in closer than one frame per hash mark). The problem is at this point each hash mark is NOT one frame each, but rather some odd number of frames around 12 or so. If I have "grid marks showing", then each grid mark represents TWO frames, but this still isn't ONE FRAME PER HASH OR GRID MARK! (Would be nice to have a keyboard shortcut or toolbar button to automatically take you to a zoom level that represents one frame per hash or grid mark! Are you listening SOFO or SONY or whoever?).
Now, I DO realize that at this point (or any zoom level) I can use F3 and F9 keys to move the cursor one frame at a time, and the numberpad keys 1 and 3 to move the selection one frame at a time. But, what sucks at this zoom level (at any zoom level actually) is that my cursor doesn't line up directly on hash marks or grid marks!
Both from what I visually see on my computer at this point and if I zoom in closer than the alt+up arrow allows me (i.e. all the way in) the cursor isn't actually on a hash mark! It's actually left of the 00:03:02:01 hash mark and very right of the 00:03:02:00. Now what confuses me is that if I have "Quantize to Frames" disabled, I am able to drag my selection anywhere between 00:03:02:00 and 00:03:02:01 which is some sort of sub frame edit I guess, but none the less it will leave gaps in my timeline! It just seems like it will create problems! Now I realize if I enable "Quantize to Frames" it will keep me from dragging my selection some point in between as described above. But what if I forget to enable or mistakenly disable "Quantize to Frames"?
1. How do I fix all of these cursor,timeline,hash marks, grid marks, quantize to frames issues?
2. Will these gaps created by sub-frame edits actually effect my project?
3. What is the point of this sub frame level editing?
4. Why do the numbers across the top of my timeline (the ones representing the "time at cursor") start off say ending in :23 (ie.- 00:03:03:23) and then gradually decrease further down the timeline (ie. - 00:03:05:22) and then further down (00::03:06:21) instead of staying consistent?
5. What's the point of pixel shifting your selections?
Basically the whole Timeline, Hash Marks, Grid Marks, and Quantize To Frames confuses me!
Ok, I'm going to pick a random spot on my timeline: 00:03:02:00
According to people in this forum, if I hold down the alt key and press the up arrow key it should zoom me in on the timeline to a point where each hash mark now represents one frame (holding the alt key should keep me from zooming in closer than one frame per hash mark). The problem is at this point each hash mark is NOT one frame each, but rather some odd number of frames around 12 or so. If I have "grid marks showing", then each grid mark represents TWO frames, but this still isn't ONE FRAME PER HASH OR GRID MARK! (Would be nice to have a keyboard shortcut or toolbar button to automatically take you to a zoom level that represents one frame per hash or grid mark! Are you listening SOFO or SONY or whoever?).
Now, I DO realize that at this point (or any zoom level) I can use F3 and F9 keys to move the cursor one frame at a time, and the numberpad keys 1 and 3 to move the selection one frame at a time. But, what sucks at this zoom level (at any zoom level actually) is that my cursor doesn't line up directly on hash marks or grid marks!
Both from what I visually see on my computer at this point and if I zoom in closer than the alt+up arrow allows me (i.e. all the way in) the cursor isn't actually on a hash mark! It's actually left of the 00:03:02:01 hash mark and very right of the 00:03:02:00. Now what confuses me is that if I have "Quantize to Frames" disabled, I am able to drag my selection anywhere between 00:03:02:00 and 00:03:02:01 which is some sort of sub frame edit I guess, but none the less it will leave gaps in my timeline! It just seems like it will create problems! Now I realize if I enable "Quantize to Frames" it will keep me from dragging my selection some point in between as described above. But what if I forget to enable or mistakenly disable "Quantize to Frames"?
1. How do I fix all of these cursor,timeline,hash marks, grid marks, quantize to frames issues?
2. Will these gaps created by sub-frame edits actually effect my project?
3. What is the point of this sub frame level editing?
4. Why do the numbers across the top of my timeline (the ones representing the "time at cursor") start off say ending in :23 (ie.- 00:03:03:23) and then gradually decrease further down the timeline (ie. - 00:03:05:22) and then further down (00::03:06:21) instead of staying consistent?
5. What's the point of pixel shifting your selections?
Basically the whole Timeline, Hash Marks, Grid Marks, and Quantize To Frames confuses me!