RikshaDriver wrote:OK I figured it out... I have to physically click on the node in the clip, otherwise it'll try to copy the whole grade.
The behavior may still not be what people want, but you are not understanding what "Focus" is. Go to Preferences > User > UI Settings and check the Show Focus Indicators In The User Interface. You will now see a red line at the top of the window that has focus. Focus is a window-specific concept, not node-specific.
Now repeat your experiment -- without clicking on a node -- and note that when you do your copy or paste the node tree window does not have focus. So you get behavior you don't want.
To get the results you expect, you need to put the focus in the node tree window, and the easiest way to do that is to click -- but you don't have to click on a node, just click on the background and you'll see the red line appear in the window. Now when you copy or paste, it only affects a node, not the entire tree. (By clicking on a node you were shifting focus to the node tree window as a side effect.)
I'm not sure if there's a quicker/easier way to shift focus to the node tree window. If not, it's still more awkward than it was, so it still needs more work perhaps. (It's a beta.) But it is working correctly with focus.
This is similar to the case where people see that up-arrow in an Inspector in Fusion doesn't increment the number. They've clicked in the timeline to change location in time and taken the focus off of the Inspector. I know this burned me a couple of times. Still not sure if they need to make certain actions not change focus or not.
They talk about Focus on page 82 of the v16 manual. I can't find a quick way to switch focus except by some sort of click.
Resolve Studio 19 latest, Fusion Studio 19 latest, MacOS Sequoia latest, MacBook Pro M4 Max