Supports hundreds of audio and video formats and codecs thanks to FFmpeg. No import required which means native editing, plus multi-format timelines, resolutions and frame-rates within a project. Frame accurate seeking supported for many video formats.

Blackmagic Design SDI and HDMI for input and preview monitoring. Screen, webcam and audio capture. Network stream playback. Supports resolutions up to 4k and capture from SDI, HDMI, webcam, JACK & Pulse audio, IP stream, X11 screen and Windows DirectShow devices.


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I detach my audio from the video clip so I can work with it better and I have been doing it manually (right click clip and press detach audio) so I had the idea to use a keyboard shortcut. I went into the actions and shortcuts page and found detach audio. I assigned it the shortcut shift-D. When I exited the shortcut editor I selected a clip on the timeline and hit shift-D but nothing happened. I restarted shotcut but the issue persisted.

I am on windows 11 running shotcut 23.05.14

I am having to "MID" pan a bunch of audio tracks and I cannot remember the shortcut instead of dragging the Audio mixer slider to the "MID" position. Any help would be great!!! Also is there a way to "select" all my audio clips I want too pan to "mid" and do it all at once instead of doing it to each one.

So, when you click "Choose Variable" after expanding the "play sound" shortcut you are only givent the following options "Clipboard", "Current Date", "Device Details" and "Shortcut Input", it seams like none of those options allow you to choose the sound file you'd to play. what to do now?

It means newly created shortcut it's just like the empty music library. you will first need to upload your sound file to the shortcut first, wich has been explained in step 2 to 4, only then you will be able to ues the sound file to do things you like, for example, play it, wich has been explained in step 5 to 9.

The method I use to accomplish this is to first move the second video clip up one track (to video track 2) and then move the audio track down one track (to audio track 2) and then move them both over to the left. I now have clips on both tracks 1 & 2--audio and video.

So the question is: Is there a keyboard shortcut which, when I lift the second video up, the audio clip will automatically move down one track. In this way, I would only have one operation rather than two.

Unfortunately after the latest update, this feature seems to disappear, before I can just hold shift and drag the clip to the track above and the audio would follow (went below the following track V2/A2 and so on).

dgfitzpat1117: Try the Alt/Option + Up/Down arrow shortcut, which moves video and audio vertically up/down tracks simultaneously. AFAIK, the video and audio move up/down in unison; you can't make the video move up while the audio moves down.

Instead, a cool feature what was introduced in the 2018 release is the ability to press Alt/Option and press Up/Down to move the video and audio portions in unison, up and down the V and A tracks. What people are asking for in this forum post is the ability to move these clip portions in opposite directions, not in the same direction. For that, you'll need to make a feature request: Feature Request/Bug Report Form

Hey Andrew! Great question. As long as I was adding that button from a slide that had audio on it, it worked for me but I did have to do it from the options menu -- here's a quick Peek of what I did. Let me know if you have other questions!

Keyboard shortcuts for the Quick Access Toolbar work when all windows are docked. I'm currently using one monitor and pressing ALT+4 when the timeline is undocked isn't opening the Replace Audio menu.

To switch to HDMI audio output (of monitor) and back to normal audio output from system audio jack (for headphones, as my monitor doesn't have audio out), I find myself opening up sound preferences and selecting the right channel everytime. Is there any way I can create a toggle button in the panel or assign some shortcut key to toggle since I do the switching so often.

This command can be used in a launcher, script or even assigned to a keyboard shortcut for fast switching between different sinks. Please replace "SINKNAME" by the name or number of your desired sink. A list of known sinks with their associated numbers and names is given by the command:

But apparently Ubuntu 11.11 will get a PulseAudio with jack detection system. According to the website below, David Henningsson has coded a detection via udev so pulse audio automatically gets switched to the last added output, including switching between different profiles of the same soundcard (as is the case with your and my setup).(see here)

I love using keyboard shortcuts to avoid going back and forth with the mouse.

I have found a way to do all review types except one:

Audio + write review combo, it will register as typing the answer instead of triggering the audio.

Is there a way around this? Any way to trigger the audio to play without clicking it with the mouse? (It also takes me out of the text box, so I often get up boxes and stuff cause I forget to click back in the text box before answering, making it double annoying)

Screenshot 2022-06-08 at 00.17.3413341226 13.2 KB

Hi, I'm using GNOME and my laptop doesn't have an audio play key, but my keyboard does. gnome-control-center has the default value for audio play, XF86AudioPlay, but I would like to assign Ctrl+Alt+Space to the same shortcut as well, so that way I don't lose functionality on my external keyboard or my laptop. The shortcut is in /org/gnome/settings-daemon/plugins/media-keys/play in dconf, but I can't seem to get it to accept 2 different shortcuts. I've tried using [XF86AudioPlay, 'space'], but it doesn't respond to either shortcut that way. Is there anyway I can get both XF86AudioPlay and Ctrl+Alt+Space to be the audio play shortcut?

I'm also hoping there's a solution to this issue. When I'm at home I use a keyboard with discreet media controls, but at work I need to map Play/Pause to the Pause function. I would very much like to not have to reset the same shortcut when I move locations.

Use this handy list to reference keyboard shortcuts for Premiere Pro and even print a PDF of the keyboard shortcuts. You can also use the visual keyboard layout to customize the shortcuts and assign multiple shortcuts to a command.

You can use the keyboard GUI to see which keys have been assigned and which are available for assignment. A tool tip reveals the full command name when you hover over a key in the Keyboard layout. When you select a modifier key on the keyboard layout, the keyboard displays all the shortcuts which require that modifier. You can also press the modifier key on the hardware keyboard to achieve this result.

You can also assign shortcuts by dragging a command from the command List onto a key in the Keyboard Layout, or onto a modifier combination for the currently selected key displayed in the Key Modifier List. To assign a command to a key along with a modifier, hold down the modifiers during drag-and-drop.

Premiere Pro lets you quickly and easily sync keyboard shortcuts between computers using the Sync Settings feature. Using Sync Settings, you can upload the customized keyboard shortcuts from your computer to Creative Cloud. Then, you can sync the keyboard shortcuts from Creative Cloud to any other computer.

Keyboard shortcuts are synchronized for the same platform only, and not between Windows and Mac OS platforms. That is, keyboard shortcuts created for Windows only sync with a Windows computer. Mac OS keyboard shortcuts only sync with a Mac OS computer.

To copy the keyboard shortcuts file to a location on a different computer, copy the .kys file to a removable drive, like a USB thumb drive. Then, copy the .kys file from the removable drive to the appropriate location in the new computer.

To add more shortcuts to a command, click to the right of an existing shortcut. If there is no existing shortcut, click anywhere in the Shortcut column. A new shortcut button is created in which you can type the shortcut.

To edit a shortcut, click the shortcut text in the Shortcuts column. The text is replaced with an editable button. Type the shortcut that you want to use. If the shortcut you type is already in use, an alert appears.

Many editors like to have a keyboard shortcuts document they can search and refer to. Premiere Pro offers a way to copy and paste keyboard shortcuts into a document, and then print. There are also pages in Help documentation that you can print, or save as a PDF.

Whether you are copy and pasting into a document, printing a PDF, or inspecting the Keyboard Shortcuts dialog box, it is important to note the available commands that are mappable to the keyboard. You can engage in a much more keyboard-driven workflow by adding new keyboard shortcuts.

You can paste the lists of keyboard shortcuts from the Keyboard Customization dialog box into a text document, like a spreadsheet, from which you can print. The advantage of the copy and pasting method is that you can view your customized keyboard shortcuts, as well. If you select Final Cut Pro, Avid Media Composer, or Custom keyboard shortcuts, then those keyboard shortcuts are the ones that are printed.

Unfortunately step 5 switches from keyboard control to mouse control, which I find slows down the job significantly.

By default there is no keyboard shortcut for deleting the selected track, but fortunately there is an option (Audacity 1.3.x) to create one: e24fc04721

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