When do you nest sequences, Pros and cons of nested sequences – Apple Final Cut Pro 7 User Manual

Page 796

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Nested sequences can be used in the same way as clips. You can add audio and video
filters to them, set their opacity and level overlays in the Timeline, work with their audio
in the Audio tab of the Viewer, and adjust their motion parameters in the Motion tab of
the Viewer.

Note: A sequence can’t be edited into itself.

When Do You Nest Sequences?

Nesting sequences is useful in various situations:

• You can edit a movie using multiple sequences; for example, you can create a sequence

for each scene. You can then place all of the sequences, in order, into a master sequence
and output to tape or export a QuickTime movie.

• You can also use nested sequences to reduce the amount of rendering when working

with effects. You can place all of the effects-intensive audio or video sections of your
program into separate sequences, and render them. When you then nest these
sequences into your main program sequence, you can change the In and Out points
of the nested sequences without having to rerender all of the clips inside of them.

• Another reason to nest sequences is to control the rendering order of effects used in

your project. This is useful for motion graphics work. You can apply filters to clips inside
a nested sequence, and then apply additional effects to the nested sequence itself.

Pros and Cons of Nested Sequences

Before you start using nested sequences in your project, it’s important to understand
some of the advantages and disadvantages of working with them. If you decide you don’t
want to nest a sequence, you can still edit content from one sequence to another. For
more information, see

“Editing the Content of One Sequence into Another Without Nesting

It.”

Pros

• Nesting allows you to reuse an entire sequence of clips over and over. You can change

a nested sequence and the changes are reflected everywhere.

Cons

• Multiple levels of sequence nesting can take a while to display, since they require

additional processing.

• If you are exporting an EDL, nested sequences may generate confusing timecode

numbers and reel names.

• If you are exporting an OMF file, nested sequences will be mixed together and exported

as a single audio media file.

• Nested sequences make media management more complicated.

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Chapter 49

Sequence-to-Sequence Editing

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