Apple Motion 2 User Manual
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Chapter 5
Using Behaviors
You can keyframe a parameter either before or after applying a behavior to the object 
that affects it. When you keyframe a parameter that is already affected by a behavior, 
the value of the keyframed curve is combined with the value generated by the 
behavior at each frame, which either raises or lowers the resulting value displayed by 
the background curve. The background curve doesn’t just display the behavior’s 
animated values, it displays the sum of all values affecting that parameter.
Raising or lowering a keyframe in the Keyframe Editor also raises or lowers the 
background curve, since it’s modifying the values generated by the behavior.
Important:
The value displayed in the Inspector for the affected parameter reflects the
final combined result of both keyframes and behaviors that are applied to that 
parameter. Editing a parameter’s values directly in the Inspector only results in changes 
made to the underlying parameter value, whether keyframed or not. This parameter 
value is then combined with the behavior’s effect, yielding a final value that may differ 
from the value you entered.
Behavior effect curve
Editable curve
Moved keyframe
01112.book Page 340 Sunday, March 13, 2005 10:36 PM