Hi Bruce, Tony,
You're both kinda right, but Bruce's instruction is the most foolproof. What you find from using the app will be true regardless of my descriptions as to what's going on inside, because these are always over simplifications. ;)
If the media file wasn't already in any open project during this session, importing it will use the current setting. Whatever the current easy-setup sequence setting is should be the one that is used.
BUT, if a piece of media has been previously imported/used in a project that has been open since launch of the application, closing the project or deleting all the uses of it isn't sufficient to clear out the cached file information for it due to undo and some other residual usages. If the number of undo steps we store (user preference) is 0, then that may work. Otherwise, you may run into it's previous settings and complications therefrom.
The easiest/most straightforward instruction is a bit overkill, but the detailed description of what exactly to do in all cases are long winded and complicated.
Regards, Helena
On 2010-02-10, at 10:38 AM, Bruce Sharpe wrote: Ah, I missed this. According to my experimentation, it is not the *current* easy-setup default sequence preset rate that gets used. If the user has changed their easy setup during an FCP session, the rate in effect at session start is used. That start-up rate seems quite persistent and the only reliable way I have found to ensure that the right thing happens is to re-start FCP.
Helena, Kelly: can you clarify this point?
Bruce On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 9:54 AM, Tony Huet <email@hidden> wrote:
On Feb 10, 2010, at 11:40 AM, Helena Ju wrote:
> At media import time, FCP converts everything's duration into a number of video frames, using the current easy-setup default sequence preset rate.
In my experience, this is what exactly what happens. So Bruce's advice is really more onerous than required. Just delete the audio clips, chose the correct Easy Setup, and re-import. The audio should now be set correctly. No need to quit FCP and restart, etc.
Bruce - try the above and see if it works for you. If so, please let us know. You might then update your instructions so the solution is a bit simpler and faster. If it does not work, please report that as well.
We have a Canon 5D and record separate audio like many others. It's funny that in 2010 we're revisiting many of the same audio/video issues that have plagued movie-making since it's inception.
Tony Huet _______________________________________________
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