Terminology for discussing mixed-format sequences – Apple Final Cut Pro 7 User Manual

Page 1474

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You can use mixed-format sequences to:

• Combine standard definition (SD) and high definition (HD) footage in one sequence

• Mix PAL and NTSC footage in a single sequence

• Work with offline-quality and full-resolution footage together

• Mix video with different aspect ratios, frame rates, or codecs in a single sequence.

This section describes time-saving features for working with mixed-format sequences
and discusses how Final Cut Pro handles settings that don’t match, such as image
dimensions, field dominance, and frame rate.

Terminology for Discussing Mixed-Format Sequences

The following definitions provide some shorthand for discussing the behavior of sequences
containing mixed formats:

Format: The defining characteristics of a video media file—image size, frame rate, and

codec

Native sequence: A sequence containing clips whose media files match the sequence

settings

Mixed-format sequence: A sequence containing clips whose media files don’t match

the sequence format

Nonmatching clip: A clip whose media file format doesn’t match the sequence format

Real-time nonmatching clip: A nonmatching clip that plays back in real time in a

mixed-format sequence (real-time clip for short)

Non-real-time nonmatching clip: A nonmatching clip that cannot play back in real time

and therefore must be rendered (non-real-time clip for short). In previous versions of
Final Cut Pro, all nonmatching clips were non-real-time clips.

Determining Whether Clips in a Sequence Will Play Back in Real
Time

When a sequence contains a clip whose media file format doesn’t match the sequence
format, the clip plays back in real time only if:

• The clip’s media file format and the sequence format are both supported by Final Cut Pro

real-time playback

• Both the clip and sequence have a frame rate supported by Final Cut Pro. The following

frame rates are supported: 23.98, 24, 25, 29.97, 30, 50, 59.94, and 60 fps.

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Chapter 86

Working with Mixed-Format Sequences

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