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Can I downgrade a project file from CC to CS6 and get back to editing.

Engaged ,
Jun 25, 2013 Jun 25, 2013

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I started a project in Premiere Pro CC, in hopes that the program would do what I needed and that bugs would be at a minimum.  Perhaps I could even participate in these forums to help make Premiere better by offering up my beta testing insights to the community.  Now, after having paid my tithe in time to Adobe and having experienced several issues, a few crashes and a show-stopping issue (either a Multi-cam issue or an AVCHD spanning issue; I'm not sure), I'm ready to humble my appetite for the bleeding-edge technology and go back to CS6 so I can simply finish my project and pay the bills. 

The new CC features are and/or will be AWESOME when the kinks are all worked out.  In the mean time, how can I revert my CC project file back to a CS6 project file?

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Jun 25, 2013 Jun 25, 2013

Nope CC is not backwards compatible.

Export as XML and import that into CS6.

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 25, 2013 Jun 25, 2013

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When I tested loading a CC-created PPro project into PPro CS6, it did not work (error reads, "The project appears to be damaged, it cannot be opened").  If you pull both a CS6 project and a CC project into TextEdit, you'll see that they are radically different.  I don't think what you need is possible.  I'd love to be wrong, though.

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Community Expert ,
Jun 25, 2013 Jun 25, 2013

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Nope CC is not backwards compatible.

Export as XML and import that into CS6.

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New Here ,
Sep 09, 2013 Sep 09, 2013

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So I'm guessing that CC would not be backwards compatible with CS 5.5? Is that true?

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Community Expert ,
Sep 09, 2013 Sep 09, 2013

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LATEST

That is correct.

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Guest
Jun 25, 2013 Jun 25, 2013

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Since so as to fulfill customers' needs and wants much better and deliver even more value Adobe stopped storing .prproj files as plain XML documents, good old tricks no longer work in CC. Hence, you're stuck monkeying with exporting to FCP XML, AAF or EDL, losing Dynamic Links, 3-rd party effects and even some built-in PrPro effects and transitions...

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Guru ,
Jun 25, 2013 Jun 25, 2013

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Those are the hand-cuffs you willingly put on when going to CC. You can never go back. You have to keep on paying rent to access your own material, even 50 years from now, if you live that long.

So much for fulfilling customers' needs and wants.

Luck never lasts a lifetime, unless you die young.

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 25, 2013 Jun 25, 2013

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cc_merchant wrote:

Those are the hand-cuffs you....

cc-merchant,

Remember to be constructive and helpful in your comments as stated in our community guidelines. If you want to vent, please take it to the Video Lounge.

Thanks,

Kevin

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Guru ,
Jun 25, 2013 Jun 25, 2013

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Not much is lost if you go back now. At most one weeks work is lost, but the longer you wait the harder it gets.

So, the only constructive and helpful solution is to cut your losses and continue with CS6.

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Engaged ,
Jun 28, 2013 Jun 28, 2013

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Fuzzy Barsik wrote:

Since so as to fulfill customers' needs and wants much better and deliver even more value Adobe stopped storing .prproj files as plain XML documents

The files are still XML, it's just that the structure has changed slightly.

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New Here ,
Jul 02, 2013 Jul 02, 2013

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Adobe stopped storing .prproj files as plain XML documents

The project files are just zipped now.

Rename any .prproj created in CC to .prproj.zip and double-click to unzip. You'll get an XML file.

I tried this on a hunch, 'cause it's exactly what Microsoft did with .docx, .xlsx, .pptx to get the file sizes down.

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Engaged ,
Jul 02, 2013 Jul 02, 2013

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I'm not seeing that. My project files are pure XML.

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Guest
Jul 03, 2013 Jul 03, 2013

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Rename any .prproj created in CC to .prproj.zip and double-click to unzip. You'll get an XML file.

Thanks for the tip.

I haven't tested CC by myself yet and judged by this.

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New Here ,
Jul 02, 2013 Jul 02, 2013

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cscooper - How are you planning to downgrade your install to CS6?

Can you do it through the Cloud App manager? Or do you have original disks or something?

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New Here ,
Jul 02, 2013 Jul 02, 2013

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All good - I found this:

http://blogs.adobe.com/davtechtable/

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