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Shortcut List
If you don’t like to read or you just want the straight list of keyboard shortcuts, here you go:
Premiere Pro CC CS6 Shortcuts - PC & Mac. Category: Shortcut: Function: Edit: S. Razor or Cut tool: Edit: ALT + Right / Left Arrow: Move SELECTED clip, one frame. And you can amaze your friends with your “Mad Pro Tools skills.” NOTE: Some Pro Tools recording shortcuts (marked below with an asterisk.) use the same key commands as certain Mac OS X shortcuts. If you want to retain use of these key commands in Pro Tools, those Mac OS X shortcuts must be disabled or remapped. The “stasis” key in Premiere is a good shortcut when you’re working with titles or other tools. When you want to revert back to your selection tool, just press V. A Handy Shortcut Guide If you want to keep all these shortcuts within reach, here’s a handy chart. List of shortcut keys for Adobe Premiere CS4.Keys for selecting tools keyboard shortcuts keys,Keys for viewing panels keyboard shortcuts keys,Keys for the Capture panel keyboard shortcuts keys,Keys for the Multi-Camera Monitor keyboard shortcuts keys,Keys for the Project panel keyboard shortcuts keys,Keys for the Timeline keyboard shortcuts keys,Keys for the Titler keyboard shortcuts keys.
The Complete Beginner Guide for Adobe Premiere Pro How To Use These Keyboard Shortcuts
Here are some details on what the keyboard shortcuts above do in case you are not 100% clear on what you get out of pressing those keys. Note that on a Mac you will have to use the Command Key instead of CTRL and use the Option Key instead of SHIFT.Move Back / Forward
Scrubbing through your timeline with the mouse can be cumbersome. Fortunately, Premiere Pro offers shortcuts to move your play head either by a single frame or by 5 frames at a time with (SHIFT +) LEFT and RIGHT.Move to Previous / Next Edit
If you are working with anything beyond a simple project, you will likely have a lot of edits, or cuts, in your sequence. Rather than navigating based on frame, it is often much more useful to navigate between these edit points within your project. You can jump the play head to the previous or next edit point using the UP / DOWN arrow keys.Editing Tools
Knowing the keyboard shortcuts for your editing tools like the back of your hand is absolutely essential in making sure you don’t waste time during your edits. Here is a full list of all the editing tools at your disposal as well as their shortcuts:
For some strange reason, Adobe has not yet added any shortcut keys to the new Type and Shape tools available in Premiere Pro CC April 2017.Unselect All
Sometimes you simply want to unselect whatever you may still have highlighted within your sequence without having to click around the interface. The keyboard shortcut CTRL + SHIFT + A should sort you out.Add Edit at Current Play Head Position
Changing over to the Razor Tool (C) and clicking on the clip you want to cut is not a very efficient method if you are editing a large project. You can add an edit to all clips underneath the current play head by pressing CTRL + SHIFT + K. Note that only the audio and video tracks marked as active will be cut. Click on the track name to toggle the active flag (blue highlight) on or off.Nudge Clip
No-one likes dragging clips around the timeline, especially when you are trying to move them just by a few frames. While you could disable Snap Mode (S), drag the clip and then re-enable snap, you are much better off simply using the keyboard shortcuts (SHIFT +) ALT + LEFT / RIGHT. Holding down SHIFT will nudge the clip forward / back by 5 frames at a time.Extend Previous / Next Edit to Play Head
This is a rather less used shortcut, but a useful one nonetheless. If you want to extend the previous clip on your timeline to your current cursor position, you can simply press SHIFT + Q on your keyboard. To extend the following clip back all the way to your play head, simply press SHIFT + W.Unlink Audio and Video
Whether you are creating L / J cuts or are simply wanting to disconnect your audio and your visuals, simply select your clips on the timeline and press CTRL + L to either link or unlink their respective audio and video tracks.Add Default Transition
Most of us use the same transition over and over. Rather than having to dig it out of the Video Effects panel and dragging it onto your timeline, you can simply select the two touching clips and press CTRL + D to add your current default transition to the edit. You can mark any video transition as the default transition by right clicking on them in the Effects panel and selecting ‘Set Selected as Default Transition’. You can also configure the duration of the default transition in your Preferences.Speed & Duration
I often speed up or slow down my clips to make watching my tutorials more pleasant for the viewer. Rather than right clicking reach clip and locating the Speed/Duration option, you can simply highlight the clip(s) and press CTRL + R to bring up the Clip Speed & Duration dialog.Set In / Out Points
Before you can export your project you have to define the start and end point of your edit. You can achieve this by moving your play head to where you want your project to start and pressing I on your keyboard to set the In Point. Then move to the end of your sequence (or wherever you want to export up to) and press O to mark the Out Point. A little highlighted area in your sequence will tell you the area you have currently defined.Mark Selected Clip
If you want to export a specific clip from your sequence, rather than setting the In and Out points separately, you can simply select the clip(s) and press X. This will define your In and Out points to include the selected clips only.Exporting Your Sequence
Finally, to export your finished sequence, simply use the keyboard shortcut CTRL + M to bring up the Export dialog.
For a complete list of all available keyboard shortcuts, make sure you check out the official Adobe Help Page on Keyboard Shortcuts for Premiere Pro.
FREE Premiere Pro Beginner Course You Might Also Like
As I’ve written before, I use this weird keyboard which has helped greatly with my carpal tunnel issues.
While this odd keyboard is great for normal typing, certain key combinations are unwieldy. So for the past decade I’ve used an external gaming keypad to the left of my keyboard with custom macros set up for some common commands:Premiere Pro Razor Tool Shortcut
*Select All
*Undo
*Copy
*Cut
*Paste
*Paste and Match Style
*Pasteboard History (which is part of Better Touch Tool)Keyboard Shortcuts Adobe Premiere
When my beloved Logitech keypad crapped out, I switched to the well-reviewed Razer Tartarus Pro. It’s nicely built! Unfortunately, it doesn’t offer drivers for the current macOS.
After a lot of googling, I’ve cobbled together a solution. So in the interest of sharing what I’ve learned — and remembering how I got this to work in the first place — let me walk through the steps.
Note that this doesn’t do half of what a proper driver could accomplish, particularly for gaming. So please, Razer, make one! But if you want to use a gaming pad like the Tartarus Pro for keyboard shortcuts, this does the trick.How to make the Tartarus Pro work on macOS Catalina
It’s important to understand that macOS sees the Tartarus Pro as a plain old keyboard. So if you plug it in and hit the 08 key, you’ll see it type a ‘w’.
Luckily, there’s software that can recognize that and do something useful instead.
Better Touch Tool is best known for getting random mice and trackpads to work, but it does a nice job on keyboards as well. (I’m using the 3.5 Alpha version.)
Let’s look at the Select All shortcut. You’ll notice the “Assigned Action” is ⌘A. Now direct your attention to the righthand sidebar. That’s where all the real work happens.
1) For the moment, ignore the “Click here to record a shortcut” section. We’ll come back to that.
2) You want the shortcut Enabled, so check the box.
3) You should put a note in this field for clarity.
4) The HUD overlay is surprisingly helpful. It shows what’s happening, like that you just hit “copy.” I find the Title text to be too large, so I use the Subtitle instead.
5) For Trigger Conditions, you want to choose “Works on keyboards with the same type as used for recording.” Yes, this is a ridiculously long label.
6) You want it to Trigger on Key Down.
7) You don’t want it to repeat.
You’ll do these steps for each key on the gaming keypad you want to remap. Here’s my setup.
I also set key 20, the spacebar, to Undo.
In theory, you’re done! For a few weeks, this worked great. And then it started having issues. When encountering password fields, my normal keyboard would start triggering keyboard shortcuts. I had to restart Better Touch Tool multiple times per day.
Basically, the app kept getting my normal weird keyboard confused with my special weird gaming keypad. I needed to call in the big guns.Enter Karabiner
I’d long heard of Karabiner Elements, a public domain app that can remap any key and do really impressive things. But it’s intimidating as hell.
Here’s what I wanted Karabiner to do: remap the keys of the Tartarus Pro to seldom-used keystrokes so I could then set those as triggers for Better Touch Tool.
Looking through their user forums, I couldn’t find any perfect matches for this use case, but luckily @bradcurtis had built a set of custom mappings (a “complex modification” in Karabiner speak) for a similar purpose.
Installing them is odd. Here’s how you do it.
*
Install Karabiner-Elements. You’ll have to give it a ton of permissions in System Preferences.
*
In Karabiner-Elements Preferences, choose Complex Modications and then Add Rule.
*
On the next screen, choose “Import More Rules from the internet.”
*
Either search for “Tartarus” or follow this link
*
Choose the Import button. It’ll ask you whether you want to open the link in Karabiner-Elements. You do.
*
Click the button to “Enable All”
If you have the Tartarus v2 like @bradcurtis, you’re done! All of the keys should be mapped to new, less-common keystrokes. But if you have the Tartarus Pro like I do, you need to modify the settings you just imported to change the product ID. This is where it gets frustratingly user-hostile, because it requires you to modify a JSON file in an external editor.
*
Navigate to ~/.config/karabiner/karabiner.json — the easiest way to do this is by choosing Go > Go to Folder… in the Finder.
*
Open this file in a plain text editor (I use TextMate).
*
Find and replace 555 (the product ID for the v2) with 580 (the product ID for the Pro).1
*
Save this file and restart Karabiner-Elements.
After doing this, and mapping these new keystrokes to Better Touch Tool, I’m back up to full speed.2
Again, almost no one on Earth will never need or want to do any of this. But if you’re the one person who needs this solution, I hope it helps. Please pay it forward by documenting something you’ve discovered.
*If you’re looking for a different product ID, open the Event Viewer in Karabiner-Elements and choose Devices. ↩
*I added one additonal modification, converting key 20 (which is coded as “spacebar”) to Left_Shift-Left_Option-s. ↩
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