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Using keyboard shortcuts, Using button bars, P. 57) – Apple Final Cut Express 4 User Manual

Page 57

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Chapter 4

Overview of the Final Cut Express Interface

57

II

Using Keyboard Shortcuts, Buttons, and Shortcut Menus

Final Cut Express offers several methods for performing commands. You can choose
commands from the menu bar at the top of the screen or from contextual shortcut
menus, or you can use keyboard shortcuts to perform many commands. Most people
work fastest using keyboard shortcuts; others prefer to use shortcut menus or the
mouse to access commands in the menu bar. Experiment to find out which method
best suits your editing style.

You can also create shortcut buttons that appear at the top of each window in the
window’s button bar. Learning about these basic interface elements will enable you to
work faster and more efficiently.

Using Keyboard Shortcuts

Keyboard shortcuts let you perform commands in Final Cut Express using the keyboard
instead of by pointing and clicking. These shortcuts can help you work more efficiently.
For example, to create a new sequence, you’d press Command-N; to zoom in, you’d
press Command-= (equal sign).

Note: The default keyboard shortcuts for tasks are presented throughout this volume,
as well as in menu commands and tooltips (tooltips appear when you move the
pointer over a control in Final Cut Express and show the name of the control, as well
as the current shortcut key(s) assigned to that control).

Using Button Bars

You can create shortcut buttons and place them in the button bar along the top of
the main windows in Final Cut Express—the Browser, Viewer, Canvas, and Timeline.
You can then click any of the shortcut buttons in the button bar to perform
commands, instead of entering keyboard shortcuts or using menus.

For more information on using and customizing button bars, see Chapter 10,

Customizing the Interface

,” on page 137.