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Ripple delete between in and out markers, how?

People's Champ ,
Oct 08, 2024 Oct 08, 2024

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Hello there!

Newb to Premiere Pro speaking...

I've set in and out markers.

Now I want to ripple delete everything between the in and out markers.

Is there a simple command that does that? A shortcut?

Currently, I'm using the razor blade tool, cutting on the in, cutting on the out, and then ripple deleting.

But perhaps there's a quicker way?

Thank you!

 

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Oct 08, 2024 Oct 08, 2024

In Point + Out Point + Extract should do the trick. Shortcuts available for all three commands. 

 

I = In Point

O = Out Point

Extract = It depends on the language on your keyboard. Hovering over the Extract icon in the Program panel should reveal the shortcut.

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Community Expert ,
Oct 08, 2024 Oct 08, 2024

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In Point + Out Point + Extract should do the trick. Shortcuts available for all three commands. 

 

I = In Point

O = Out Point

Extract = It depends on the language on your keyboard. Hovering over the Extract icon in the Program panel should reveal the shortcut.

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People's Champ ,
Oct 08, 2024 Oct 08, 2024

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Lovely, thank you!

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Community Expert ,
Oct 08, 2024 Oct 08, 2024

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You´re welcome! 🙂

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People's Champ ,
Oct 08, 2024 Oct 08, 2024

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One extra question: After extracting, I seem to be getting a black frame. In other words, the "ripple" isn't quite rippling perfectly, it's leaving a single black vacant frame.

I'm wondering if this is something to do with the linked audio track, perhaps? Is PP trying to avoid cutting the audio at an awkward spot and that's creating the blank frame?

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Community Expert ,
Oct 08, 2024 Oct 08, 2024

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Not really sure what you mean, but it can be due to track targeting.

 

In the image below V1-V3 and A1-A4 is selected, iow blue. When doing i ripple delete now with In/Out points all tracks will be affected. But if you for example don´t have A4 selected though you have a audio clip there it wont be affected by the ripple delete. This is the most common reason to that it seems that something went wrong.

 

To fast select all V´s in in one go is to Shift+click on any of the V´s. The same goes for audio, Shift+click on any of the A´s. Its possible to set up keyboard shortcuts for this as well.

 

One other thing is that if you for example set an In Point at 00:00:05:00 and an Out Point at 00:00:06:00 with the aim of cutting out exact one second you will actually also remove the frame 00:00:06:01 as well, iow removing 1 seond and one frame. When i set an Out Point i always press the left arrow once to go back one frame to avoid this since it do cause issues. Not always, but imho too often to be good.

 

Did any of that blah blah help? 🙂

 

Averdahl_0-1728416722666.png

Averdahl_1-1728417200857.png

 

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People's Champ ,
Oct 08, 2024 Oct 08, 2024

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I'm not sure if it helped. I think you're describing a situ in which the delete simply doesn't affect all tracks.

The case I'm describing is that it is affecting everything, but it's not making a "clean" cut, and not actually closing all the gaps properly (i.e. not rippling perfectly).

In the following sequence, we see: (1) In and Out points set, ready to Extract.

InAndOutSet.png

(2) Just after clicking on Extract. Looks okay from a distance.

PostExtraction.png

(3) But zoomed in, you see that in fact both the audio (I didn't realize this initially) and the video have not completely rippled, i.e., there is a distinct gap both in the audio and video tracks.

ZoomedIn.png

 

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Community Expert ,
Oct 09, 2024 Oct 09, 2024

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LATEST

That result is not normal. One thing that caught my attention is that the blue "bar" that normally point to the right points mostly to the left and some of it point to the right on you screen dump. On my screen dump below you can see how it should look.

 

When Premiere Pro behaves odd the best way to fix it is to reset the preferences. Close Premiere Pro and then launch Premiere Pro while holding down the Alt-key. This should give you the Reset options dialog.

 

Averdahl_0-1728467415141.png

Averdahl_1-1728467653476.png

Averdahl_2-1728468195225.png

 

quote

(3) But zoomed in, you see that in fact both the audio (I didn't realize this initially) and the video have not completely rippled, i.e., there is a distinct gap both in the audio and video tracks.

 

By @TᴀW

 

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