Try this experiment:
1) Enable all snapping preferences as per usual.
2) Drop a still on a timeline.
3) Drop a 2nd still on the same timeline, and nudge it up against the 1st so there are no gaps and no overlaps. (Obviously, enable snapping helps.)
4) Select the 2nd still and open its pan/crop editor.
5) Click on the "First Keyframe" button.
What do you see in the preview window? I see the picture change from the 2nd still to the 1st still.
Try it again with video clips. This time the 2nd clip remains on the preview. IOW, the opposite behavior.
Now some might call this a bug, some might say that at the first keyframe of the 2nd still, its the 1st clip that is still visible. Whatever. I just say that it is a huge annoyance to have to develop a slide show video this way.
Can someone please confirm this issue for me? IOW, its not just me. TIA. And if you can confirm it, would you agree that the preferable behavior is for the "active" still to remain in the preview window when someone scrolls to that still's first keyframe.
1) Enable all snapping preferences as per usual.
2) Drop a still on a timeline.
3) Drop a 2nd still on the same timeline, and nudge it up against the 1st so there are no gaps and no overlaps. (Obviously, enable snapping helps.)
4) Select the 2nd still and open its pan/crop editor.
5) Click on the "First Keyframe" button.
What do you see in the preview window? I see the picture change from the 2nd still to the 1st still.
Try it again with video clips. This time the 2nd clip remains on the preview. IOW, the opposite behavior.
Now some might call this a bug, some might say that at the first keyframe of the 2nd still, its the 1st clip that is still visible. Whatever. I just say that it is a huge annoyance to have to develop a slide show video this way.
Can someone please confirm this issue for me? IOW, its not just me. TIA. And if you can confirm it, would you agree that the preferable behavior is for the "active" still to remain in the preview window when someone scrolls to that still's first keyframe.