Adobe AFTER EFFECTS CS3 PROFESSIONAL User Manual page 142

Hide thumbs Also See for AFTER EFFECTS CS3 PROFESSIONAL:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

AFTER EFFECTS CS3
136
User Guide
• To change time display units, choose File > Project Settings, and choose from the options in the Display Style
section.
Displays time as timecode, using the frame rate that you specify as the timecode base. Auto uses the
Timecode Base
rounded frame rate of the footage item or composition. If an item doesn't have timecode (such as an audio file), After
Effects uses a default value (30 fps for English and Japanese versions of After Effects, or 25 fps for French, German,
Spanish, and Italian versions) or the last non-auto value you specified in the Project Settings dialog box. You can also
specify that After Effects use a specific frame rate.
Note: You can specify specific frame rates for display in the Timecode Base menu; however, in most cases, you should
leave the timecode base set to Auto.
Two of the more commonly used combinations of time display settings are 30
Drop Frame versus Non-Drop Frame
fps drop-frame timecode and 30 fps non-drop-frame timecode. When the frame rate is a non-integer number—as
is the case with the NTSC frame rate of 29.97 frames per second—a compromise of one sort or another must be made
in displaying time. Either the time display can accurately show clock time (after one hour, the time display shows
1:00:00:00) or the time display can be continuously numbered (frame n is always followed by frame n + 1, modulo
the number of frames per second). Drop-frame timecode does the former; non-drop-frame timecode does the latter.
In the case of NTSC 30 fps drop-frame timecode, two frame numbers are skipped for each minute, except for every
tenth minute. Drop-frame timecode is conventionally indicated by separating the time units with semicolons. The
most common case for which drop-frame versus non-drop-frame timecode is relevant is 29.97 fps NTSC, but it also
applies to 23.976 fps (which is treated by After Effects as non-drop-frame timecode) and 59.94 fps.
Timecode for 59.94 fps compositions and footage items matches that in Adobe Premiere Pro: When the timecode
base is 30 fps, each timecode value repeats twice. When the timecode base is 60 fps drop-frame, frame numbers
0,1,2,3 are dropped in exactly the same places as where 0,1 are dropped for drop-frame timecode with a timecode
base of 30 fps.
Displays number of feet of film, plus frames for fractional feet, for 16mm or 35mm film. Numbering
Feet + Frames
starts at the frame number that you specify with the Start Numbering Frames At value.
Displays frame number instead of time. Use this setting for convenience when doing work that you are
Frames
integrating with a frame-based format, like Flash.

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents