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As long as the objects are below the graphic text,
you can not directly select the objects in the Program window with the Select tool.
It always selects the graphic text (the graphic text area covers the whole screen)
Hey there @C27618681pmp5. What's up @Richard van den Boogaard ? 🙂 I think I know what's going on. Correct me if I have not understood your problem. Richard, your fellow Hollander has one solution here. I also have one.
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Activate Direct Manipulation in Program Monitor is the way to go.
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You're quite right, this is a little weird behavior...
You would expect the track targeting to have an effect on this (in your example V1 is targeted, but V2 and V3 are not highlighted), but I guess this is the result of PPro being an NLE intended for video and audio assets, not a design or motion graphics program, such as Illustrator, InDesign, Photoshop or After Effects.
Something to look into @Kevin-Monahan?
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Hey there @C27618681pmp5. What's up @Richard van den Boogaard ? 🙂 I think I know what's going on. Correct me if I have not understood your problem. Richard, your fellow Hollander has one solution here. I also have one.
Either of these should give you the option to select a desired clip for manipulation in the Program Monitor.
Personally, I'd like to see clip selection in the Timeline added to these options. Clip manipulation in the Comp Window and Timeline works that way in After Effects. It also worked that way in other NLEs, like Final Cut Pro 1.0-7.0 (aka FCP "Classic").
Richard, engaging the function with track selection might still require that the clip be selected. I think that might add a step. Let me know how you'd like to see that work, if I am not understanding what you'd like to see.
If you'd like to see an enhancement along these lines, kindly let me know and we can move the post into the "Ideas" forum.
Thanks,
Kevin
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Adding the Activate Direct Manipulation in Program Monitor and adding a keyboard shortcut (like Ann, I just reserved F7 for this) certainly works, provided you have to select the clip in the timeline first.
I can't recall exactly which Adobe program uses this (Illustrator or InDesign) but there you can select an object lower in the stacking order by holding the CTRL/CMD or ALT/Option key. That would be another way of quickly cycling through a number of items stacked on top of each other in a timeline.
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I also remember this part, and it would be the best solution, hopefully this feature will be added later.
Selecting from Program Monitor definitely saves more time than looking in the track.
(Like the auto-select feature in Photoshop, click on an object and it will automatically select the layer)
The only solution at this stage is to use the "Activate Direct Manipulation in Program Monitor" shortcut key.
but You still have to find the track you want to select from a bunch of tracks
Thanks for telling us that there is this method, at least faster than the transform to adjust some
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Activate Direct Manipulation in Program Monitor is the way to go.
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Thanks, @Ann Bens!