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1. Re: Finding your place in a nested sequence
Jeff Bellune Jul 5, 2011 8:44 AM (in response to Stevedocmaker)Use the keyboard shortcut "M" to perform a Match Frame operation.
-Jeff
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2. Re: Finding your place in a nested sequence
Colin Brougham Jul 5, 2011 8:49 AM (in response to Jeff Bellune)Use the keyboard shortcut "M" to perform a Match Frame operation.
Nein!
Use Shift+T: Reveal Nested Sequence. It will open up the nest in a Timeline panel tab (if it isn't already) and park the playhead at the matching frame.
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3. Re: Finding your place in a nested sequence
Jeff Bellune Jul 5, 2011 9:05 AM (in response to Colin Brougham)Nice tip! But didn't the OP want the nest opened in the SM?
(Or are my parsing skills fading?)
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4. Re: Finding your place in a nested sequence
Colin Brougham Jul 5, 2011 9:11 AM (in response to Jeff Bellune)Ah, maybe... my bad. My parsing skills are still a little fuzzy after the long weekend
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5. Re: Finding your place in a nested sequence
Jgoodnight22 Nov 19, 2011 3:49 PM (in response to Jeff Bellune)Both of the options discussed here work fine for matching the frame in the nested sequence to the frame in the main sequence. I can not figure out how to do the opposite. I want to find an frame(or edit point) in my nested sequence then jump to the same frame in my main sequence. Is that possible?
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6. Re: Finding your place in a nested sequence
Stephen_Spider Nov 19, 2011 10:21 PM (in response to Jgoodnight22)Set a sequence marker in the nested sequence. It will appear like a clip marker in the master\parent sequence.
edit... Not very clear there. While the nested sequence is open, set a sequence marker at desired frame. When that sequence is added to another sequence as a nested clip, the marker will show up as a clip marker. I use this for multi-camera editing often.



