Macromedia Captivate for Windows. Visual QuickStart Guide
| If you are a Flash MX 2004 or Director MX user, have edited video or audio, or worked with other applications that have a time-based focus, you are quite used to working with a timeline. In simple terms, a timeline gives you a graphical overview of the time used by each object on a slide. Moving objects on the timeline affect when they appear on the slide, and lengthening or shortening their size on the timeline affects how long they remain visible. This is exactly the way the Captivate timeline operates. To open and close the timeline
Touring the Captivate timeline
Though it may look a little complicated, at first glance, the Captivate timeline (Figure 4.2) is actually quite intuitive. Each object in a slide is contained in its own layer. The length of the strip indicates the duration of the object; objects with longer strips are visible for longer than objects with shorter strips. Figure 4.2. The Captivate Timeline.
Rolling the mouse over an object on the timeline displays a tool tip that shows the start and end time of the object and, in the case of a caption, the caption text. There will be occasions where you want an object to appear at a particular point in time. You can do this using the playhead. You can also drag the playhead across the timeline. This technique, called scrubbing, lets you test a slide to ensure everything on the slide is where it is supposed to be and appear when it is supposed to appear. The object type of each element on the slide is indicated by an icon. Mouse objects have mouse icons, captions have caption icons, sounds show the waveform, and so on. The order of appearance is determined by the object's location in the timeline. Objects on the left side of the timeline appear before objects on the right side. You can move objects, in their layer, to right or the left, but you can't move them up or down to other layers in the timeline. You can only move the layer. Also, you can delete objects from the timeline which also removes the object's layer from the timeline. For precise positioning on the timeline, you can expand or contract the timeline view. Selecting an object on the timeline also selects it in the Edit View panel. To collapse or open the timeline view
To expand or contract the timeline view
Once you make your choice, the timeline changes to the view selected. To move objects on the timeline
In Figure 4.5, you can see the value of being able to drag objects on the timeline and place them in different locations. The "step" pattern indicates the appearance of the objects as the slide plays. The object that is the bottom step will have played and disappeared before the object in the next step. Figure 4.5. Objects are placed in their own layer and can be moved to the right or left on the timeline. They can't be moved to other layers in the same timeline.
To change the duration of a slide
To change the duration of an object
To align objects to the playhead
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