LFurtado95 wrote:Hello I have a Windows 10, 64-bit computer and I just downloaded TvPaint 11 Professional 64-bit on my computer but it wont let me export to a .mov file. I've heard that using the 32 bit version allows for this kind of export of files but I don't know if its true. If it is can I download that version to my computer and if I can, how? So that I can run both versions; 64 bit for work and 32 bit for exporting. Or if there is another extension I can use to export to a video file that runs with Quicktime.
Thank you!
The .AVI files exported from TVPaint 11 using the internal AVI export engine with Motion JPEG compression will play on both Windows and Mac computers (I can view the AVI files exported from TVPaint in Quicktime on my Mac).
You could export to AVI then use a software such as Quicktime Pro to convert the file to .MOV (although Windows users are now advised NOT to use Quicktime due to Apple dropping support of Quicktime on Windows , but there are different opinions on that , for example:
https://www.cinecom.net/tutorials/quick ... ep-codecs/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; ).
In TVPaint Pro 64 bits did you try the option of exporting to MOV with the FFMpeg compression ? (actually, I'm not sure if the FFMpeg option is for Windows or not ? I am on Mac). FFMpeg option in TVPaint Pro 64bits only has two options for now: Lossless (Apple PNG) and Compressed (MPEG-4) . Fabrice tells me they are looking in to adding FFMpeg export with ProRes codec, but that is not implemented yet .
But in fact , you do have the option to have BOTH versions (64bits and 32bits) installed on your computer , so you can open a project in the 32bits version to export directly to Quicktime using various Quicktime codecs such as H.264 or Apple ProRes , whatever codecs you have installed on you computer (but again with the caveat that Windows users are advised not to use Quicktime due to security concerns, but I believe that the main security concern for Windows is with the Quicktime browser plug-in and also playing Quicktime .mov files that have be downloaded from the internet , although there is the possibility to scan all downloaded .mov files with a virus scanner before opening them , so that would probably be safe (?) . Again refer to this :
https://www.cinecom.net/tutorials/quick ... ep-codecs/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; )