About mxf-based formats – Apple Final Cut Pro 5 User Manual

Page 312

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Chapter 22

Importing Media Files Into Your Project

311

IV

Before you export a movie file for use in your Final Cut Pro sequence, do
the following:

1

Check the following sequence settings:

 Frame rate (editing timebase)
 Image dimensions
 Pixel aspect ratio
 Video codec and quality settings
 Audio sample rate and bit depth

For details on how to do this, see Volume IV, Chapter 26, “Sequence Settings and Presets.”

2

Set your QuickTime export settings to match the settings of the sequence you want to
edit your exported media file into.

To import a QuickTime movie file into Final Cut Pro, follow the steps in “

Importing

Media Files

” on page 306.

If any of the settings in your imported QuickTime file don’t match your sequence
settings, a red video render bar appears in the Timeline when you add that clip to the
sequence. You can check the settings of the clip by choosing
Edit > Item Properties > Format.

About MXF-Based Formats

MXF is not a video format itself, but rather a format that can contain almost any kind of
video or audio media. MXF is similar to QuickTime, which is not a single video signal, but
a general media format that can contain video compressed with supported codecs, audio
with different sample rates, video with different dimensions, frame rates, and so on.

A number of video formats can be stored within MXF files. For example, a DV movie
can be stored within an MXF file. Final Cut Pro works with QuickTime media files, so you
need to convert MXF data to QuickTime before you can start editing.

Some examples of popular video formats that are stored in an MXF container include:

 IMX: A standard definition, MPEG-2, I-frame-only video format. IMX media can be

stored on a tape, hard disk, or optical disc.

 Panasonic P2 cards: These solid-state memory cards can store DV (25), DVCPRO, and

DVCPRO 50 media.

For more information about importing these formats, see Working With High Definition
and Broadcast Formats
.

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