Hello again Colin,
The solution you posted in the other discussion regarding the combined use of Action Scripts and After Time Elapsed worked well for me when exporting video files for each individual Scene. However, I have a friend who is doing a similar type of project where they also need to export over 50 individual Adobe Animate Scenes and then import those exported clips into Premiere. Now the difference between my friend and I is that they are not as willing to spend the time and effort into repeatedly changing the Action Scripts and recalculating the appropriate value in the "After Time Elapsed" box for each Scene that needs to be exported..
With regards to my initial post in this discussion, exporting individual Scenes as a GIF in Adobe Animate (and then importing those GIF's into Premiere) is a quick and easy process. With my friend not being too concerned with the export quality of the GIF and more concerned with how quickly they can pump out these exports, this method works great for them. Though the issue with the loss of frames still stands and is getting in the way of my friend from importing these GIF files into the precise spots (with dedicated frame lengths) in their Premiere timeline.
So to conclude this post, is there a way to export a Scene as a GIF and have it not lose any frames?
I hope I was able to make sense out of my post. If there is any question regarding the way I have written this post, feel free to ask and I will try my best to clarify myself.
Thanks again for the feedback Colin.
Regards
It may still get complicated. BTW, do as ClayUUID said, use PNG and not GIF.
The complication is that if you have movieclips they won't advance when exporting an image sequence. You would need to set them all to be Graphic.