![]() ![]() You can use the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard to nudge the play-head one frame at a time or you can hold down the shift key as you press the arrow keys in order to move your play-head one second at a time. Now the key focus point while editing is the scrubber or play-head, clicking on the small bar above the tracks will allow you to jump your play-head to that location. Clicking either of those icons will return the track to its normal visibility. Now if you wanna temporarily disable the visual contents of a track you can do so by clicking the I icon in the head of the track or to temporarily disable all of the audio for a particular track you could do so by clicking the speaker icon. Or you can use the up arrow to expand the track and get a better look at the audio wave form. If you're working with a lot of tracks, it may be helpful to switch to a short track mode by clicking to down arrow at the head of the track. Just click and drag to reposition the track. You can change the position of a track by using the track grabber handles here at the head of the track. ![]() A common organizational practice in most video editing programs is to arrange your tracks so that any visible media appears on the upper tracks while any audio only media appears on the lower tracks. Content that appears on a higher track will appear in front of any content that appears on a lower track. Think of these tracks as layers of glass that you're looking down through from top to bottom. Now ScreenFlow arranges your media clips into a stack of tracks. Now if you're following along I'm in the timeline project. Now this is where you're gonna spend most of your time. In this chapter we're gonna shift our focus to refining your story by learning how to edit your movie with the ScreenFlow editor. ![]()
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