Consistent behavior between SPLIT Layer and SPLIT Clip
Posted: 07 Jan 2023, 21:18
UPDATE: Searching the forum I find that Peter Wassink brought up this issue back in 2015. Peter's summation of the problem was much more succinct than my post below, so here is Peter's request to sum up what I was trying to get at in my longer post below:
When you split a layer TVPaint will split to the right side of the current frame, but if you split a clip TVPaint will make the split to the left side of the current frame.
Split behavior (on either a layer or clip) should be consistent: TVPaint should always cut to the right of the current frame ...or cut to the left of the current frame... I really don't mind which side , as long as it is consistently the same for both cases, Split Layer or Split Clip.
---------
My original long-winded request with screenshots:
This may seem like such a small thing that I may be accused of "splitting hairs" (ha-ha) , so I hesitate to bring it up, but it's one of those little inconsistencies of behavior between two functions that have the same name which seem as though they should have the same behavior.
I'm talking about SPLIT Layer compared to SPLIT Clip.
SPLIT Layer command (from the Handy Panel and also from the Layer Menu) splits to the frame after the selected frame. So , for example if I have a layer that is 24 frames long and I split it at frame 12, the result is an even split, so the first layer has 12 frames and the second layer has 12 frames.
However, SPLIT Clip command (from the Clip Menu) behaves differently in that it will split to the frame before the selected frame. So if I am on frame 12 when I click on SPLIT Clip , it splits to the frame before , so the first clip (Clip 001_left) has 11 frames and the second clip (Clip_001_right) has 13 frames , instead of an even split of 12 frames and 12 frames , like the SPLIT Layer command.
Of course , it's not a terrible burden to have to remember that the two similarly named functions (SPLIT Layer and SPLIT Clip) behave differently in how they apply the Split (after or before), so if I am splitting the Clip and want it to be an even split I have to remember to move the cursor ahead one frame to frame 13, so when it splits the clip it will split it at frame 12 , resulting in an even split of 12 and 12. But it seems like this Splitting behavior should be consistent, whether the user is splitting a layer or splitting a clip, so no mental shift is required. Every time the user invokes a Split command (whether it is to Split a layer or a clip) the user knows that the split will be after the selected frame.
Does the request make sense to anyone else or am I being too picky about this ?
When you split a layer TVPaint will split to the right side of the current frame, but if you split a clip TVPaint will make the split to the left side of the current frame.
Split behavior (on either a layer or clip) should be consistent: TVPaint should always cut to the right of the current frame ...or cut to the left of the current frame... I really don't mind which side , as long as it is consistently the same for both cases, Split Layer or Split Clip.
---------
My original long-winded request with screenshots:
This may seem like such a small thing that I may be accused of "splitting hairs" (ha-ha) , so I hesitate to bring it up, but it's one of those little inconsistencies of behavior between two functions that have the same name which seem as though they should have the same behavior.
I'm talking about SPLIT Layer compared to SPLIT Clip.
SPLIT Layer command (from the Handy Panel and also from the Layer Menu) splits to the frame after the selected frame. So , for example if I have a layer that is 24 frames long and I split it at frame 12, the result is an even split, so the first layer has 12 frames and the second layer has 12 frames.
However, SPLIT Clip command (from the Clip Menu) behaves differently in that it will split to the frame before the selected frame. So if I am on frame 12 when I click on SPLIT Clip , it splits to the frame before , so the first clip (Clip 001_left) has 11 frames and the second clip (Clip_001_right) has 13 frames , instead of an even split of 12 frames and 12 frames , like the SPLIT Layer command.
Of course , it's not a terrible burden to have to remember that the two similarly named functions (SPLIT Layer and SPLIT Clip) behave differently in how they apply the Split (after or before), so if I am splitting the Clip and want it to be an even split I have to remember to move the cursor ahead one frame to frame 13, so when it splits the clip it will split it at frame 12 , resulting in an even split of 12 and 12. But it seems like this Splitting behavior should be consistent, whether the user is splitting a layer or splitting a clip, so no mental shift is required. Every time the user invokes a Split command (whether it is to Split a layer or a clip) the user knows that the split will be after the selected frame.
Does the request make sense to anyone else or am I being too picky about this ?