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Adobe dropped support for that a long time ago. You can export the video in a high quality format like DNxHD, ProRes, Cineform or umcompressed AVI and convert it with 3rd party software to QT/H264.
Try MediaCoder (https://www.mediacoderhq.com/) for that.
*Martin
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I am basing this answer on an assumption that you are using a Windows computer.
If they have asked for QT, it suggests they are on a Mac, which should make things easy for you. Make your output file as H.264 in Media Encoder/AE without audio and export as normal. Do a seperate audio output as a .WAV file (as they have asked for audio separately). Simply change the file extension on your output video file from '.mp4' to '.mov' and it will be seen as a QT file by any Mac. I always independently test the results on multiple devices (eg Android, iOS, PC) and have never had a glitch.
I do this all the time - it's purely cosmetic. Obviously, do check before hand that it all works, incase there are elements of your workflow that might effect the final output!
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It is actually Apple that dropped the support for h.264 in a .mov container. Adobe had nothing to do with it. QT will play h.264 files as MP4 files, there is no difference. If your client demands a MOV, all you have to do is change the extension to MOV. QT will not know the difference. The latest builds of the QT player just pass through the h.264. When you use Final Cut Pro to render an h.264 movie they just change the extension. There is no difference at all in the actual structure of the file.
The biggest problem is the Audio requirements for .wav. There is no such thing. QuickTime File Format - Wikipedia
You can choose from a couple of options. The sample rate and compression can be changed. The most common format is Linear PCM 16 bit 48 kHz. A client specifying WAV compression is nonsense. You can deliver a WAV file, but the option to set the format to WAV inside an H.264 file does not exist. I strongly suspect they want Linear PCM 48 kHz 16-bit Uncompressed because that is the standard.
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Deepakk, just to be clear; my reference to your client requesting a separate audio file is exactly because of what Rick says here, ie Wav compression is not something that exists within a muxed video file. D