Hihow to make a short cut with a serie of actions or a script to do that (see the picture). Sorry if it's a newbie question, I've searched the answer in the forum but I didn't find it. Thanks in advance.
Romain
Thanks again for your help.
About the worflow :
I have a PT session in which a large part of the clips have been treated in Izotope RX via Batch Processing .
All those clips are located in a different folder than the Audio Files Folder of the PT session.
The guy who did the Batch Processing " choosed to keep the original name of the clips when he saved the Batch Processing in Izotope RX.
As a result the names of the original clips and the treated clips are the same, but there are in 2 different folders.
So, when I'am editing, if I have a doubt about the state of a clip ( was he treated or not ) I hit Reveal In Finder and I can see in which folder is the clip, if he has been treated or not.
The above script is one of these "great if it works, but hard to figure out when it doesn't". It's doing a couple of things that aren't best practices in SoundFlow (ie. simulating keystrokes, using manual wait times etc) - and, perhaps more importantly, it uses some assumptions that may not always be true - ie., that by searching for the clip's name and then selecting the clip, it will always end up at the top of the clip list.
So, in other words, the approach here is by design not stable. It's pretty cool that it works most of the time for the users who added the code - but most likely, when it's failing for you, it's either due to the manual wait times (which we always advise against using), or the assumptions around clip search.
in contrast to the REVEAL BOUNCED FOLDERS script I use, this one is very cumbersome. Seems like there should be a way to grab the name of the selected file, similar to double clicking it, then go to the audio files folder of the current session, and then search for that copied file name in that folder.
One other approach could be to grab the clip name in the rename clip dialog, and then just use the filename from that to search through the Audio Files folder for a matching filename.
That approach would only work of course, if you're not linking to files in other folders.
But it could potentially be made as a template script where you could easily specify additional search paths.
Note you can't just copy/paste the contents of a template script into a normal script (it could look like that's what you're doing, but I have no chance of knowing without seeing the contents of the script you're running here)
If your file is in the Audio Files folder and it still doesn't work then there's a chance a part of the script isn't working. If that's the case, please share a screenshot of the Clip Rename dialog as it looks for the clip you're testing.
@Jeremy_Bowker it should now work.
I've updated the script in v1.0.27 of the Pro Tools Utilities package so it should now work more reliably, by ensuring the Clip Info part of the Clip Rename dialog gets expanded as needed.
@chrscheuer can i revive this old thread? i was just searching for this exact function. the current utility in soundflow gives an error message. would you mind taking a look at the newest PT and see if there's a way to make this work?
The best way to get help with a script (even if it's part of an older thread) is to use the Script Help workflow. Once you've created the thread, you can link to this thread to help give context.
By using the Script Help workflow, you're giving more information to allow people to help you (me or the community), in that we'd have access to the script you're attempting to use, logs and most importantly, what you hope for the script to do and the exact error messages.
Please note that the Pro Tools Utilities package is now deprecated in favor of the official Pro Tools package from SoundFlow. Any scripts that we deemed we would be able to support are in the Pro Tools package.
I designed it to work on my Neewer RA Finder but it could possibly work with similar ones (that have the removable adaptor plates for various camera types). My finder came with a few different adaptor plates and I chose the metal screw-together type which was labeled for use with the older Nikon F series cameras.
As you can see from the photos, this just screws into the printed clip allowing you to leave it in place on the Polar Scope but remove the RA Finder easily. It is best oriented with the clips at the top and bottom (rather than on the side).
Great result, I have been using my RA camera finder for years, great piece of kit maybe FLO should consider selling these with adapters for any mount that has a polarscope, they are quite useful on straight through finders too.
I initially started out doing something very similar but in a much more crude way years ago by fitting a plumbing part called an end stop to a Nikon right angle finder and just push fitting it over the polar scope on my old NEQ6 - worked a treat. Now I use a QHY pole master camera. No more achy back or cold/wet knees
I also bought the right angle finder for my Sirius mount (HEQ5) and found this thread for the 3D printed adapter Thanks for sharing, it works perfectly ! I printed all the pieces from the second file and glued them together. I just need to spray paint them black and I will be the star of the party next time I go out
Upload your YouTube video by dragging and dropping it into a new Descript project. This will automatically generate a transcript synced with your video that you can use to find clips by pressing CTRL/CMD+K or using the search bar.
When you find a moment you want to clip, you can highlight it and right click to select Duplicate to > New composition to preserve the original while creating a new composition. Or you can automatically highlight the best moments in your video using the Find good clips AI Action, then simply confirm the ones you want to turn into clips in separate compositions.
Edit your newly created clips by selecting a clip from the compositions dropdown. Use the canvas to choose your aspect ratio, as well as add music, animated captions, and more using the insert menu. Save time by selecting Save scene as template to turn your clip into a template you can apply to other clips. Finally, click Publish to export all your clips or publish them directly to your YouTube channel.
Forget scrubbing your timeline and cutting parts of a video you want to clip and edit. Just search the transcript to highlight soundbites, or curate multiple clips in one click with the Find good clips AI action.
Apply short-form video templates from our template library, or create custom templates from existing clips to easily apply the same style of captions, animations to all your future clips for TikTok, Instagram/Facebook reels, YouTube shorts, and more.
Write your script, record content, edit videos, create clips, and publish to YouTube all in one app with Descript. Work alone with the support of a built-in AI, or collaboratively by inviting your team to give feedback or create videos with you.
You can create YouTube shorts by cutting your YouTube video into clips that are under 60 seconds. Then optimize them for shorts by changing the aspect ratio to portrait or square, and adding animated captions to capture and keep attention.
Yes, the free plan gives you access to all the core video editing features, 1 hour of transcription, and 1 watermark-free export per month. To export unlimited watermark-free clips and increase the transcription limit to 10+ hours per month, subscribe to a paid plan starting at only $12/month.
Absolutely. You can customize the clip finder by just tailoring the default AI prompt. For example, you can specific topics to look for, or increase the duration or number of clips you want it to find.
The same vein-enhancing optical technology found in the Oxy-Iso Blood Draw Vein Glasses, but here as clip-on thickness (1.5mm) uncut lenses (6-base curvature). Take them to your optometrist to be cut for clip-ons for your everyday glasses.
The OXY-ISO specializes in enhanced perception of veins, and is favored by nurses, phlebotomists, many paramedics and any medical personnel interested primarily in blood draws; it amplifies oxygenation and veins, but ISOlates perception to the oxygenation signal, and is thus more of a special purpose tool for blood draws. Recommended for first time VINO users. Veins appear to fluoresce.
VINO OPTICS Vein Glasses technology has no batteries, no wires, no special lights. They look just like protective eyewear. But they still take training. You have to acquire experience with how they work, and how to employ white light so that you get enough, and without glare. It takes time. Give yourself a couple weeks. And begin outdoors where lighting is great.
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