Working With Assets; About Clip Properties; To See The Properties Of A Clip; To Duplicate A Clip - Adobe PREMIERE PRO 2 Manual

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Working with assets

About clip properties

Adobe Premiere Pro includes clip analysis tools that you can use to evaluate a file in any supported format stored
inside or outside a project. For example, after producing a video clip to be streamed from a web server, you can use
clip analysis tools to determine whether a clip you exported has an appropriate data rate for Internet distribution.
The Properties feature provides detailed information about any clip. For video files, analyzed properties can include
the file size, number of video and audio tracks, duration, average frame rate, audio sample rate, video data rate, and
compression settings. You can also use the Properties feature to alert you to the presence of any dropped frames in a
clip you just captured. Use the data rate graph to evaluate how well the output data rate matches the requirements of
your delivery medium. It charts each frame of a video file to show you the render keyframe rate, the difference
between compression keyframes and differenced frames (frames that exist between keyframes), and data rate levels
at each frame. The graph includes the following information:
The line represents the average data rate.
Data rate
The red bars represent the sample size of each keyframed frame.
Sample size
Differenced frames sample size
compression keyframes.

To see the properties of a clip

Do one of the following:
If the clip is in the Project panel, select it to display a subset of its properties in the preview area at the top of the
Project panel.
If the clip is in the Source Monitor, Timeline panel, or Project panel, select it and choose File > Get Properties
For > Selection.
If the clip is not in the project, choose File > Get Properties For > File. Locate and select the clip you want to
analyze, and then click Open.
You can also view clip properties in the Source Monitor, Timeline panel, or Project panel by right-clicking a clip and
choosing Properties.

To duplicate a clip

1
In the Project panel, select a clip, and choose Edit > Duplicate.
To rename the duplicate clip, select it, choose Clip > Rename, and type a new name for the clip.
2
You can also create a duplicate clip by copying and pasting it in the Project panel (or its folders), by Ctrl-dragging a
clip in the Project panel, or by dragging a clip from the Source Monitor to the Project panel.
To rename a clip
All files in your project are stored on your hard disk as individual files. Only a reference to each file is added to the
Project panel in Adobe Premiere Pro. Whenever you rename a clip in Adobe Premiere Pro, the original file and file
name remain untouched on your hard disk.
Select the clip, and choose Clip > Rename.
1
Type the new name, and press Enter.
2
The blue bars represent the sample size of the differenced frames between
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