Jean Claude wrote:Tom Early wrote:I know what I'm doing. It's a bug. If it works for you then great, but I'm sure you must be aware that some bugs are system specific.
Sorry,
You're kidding: it's not a bug. You only watched the little clip I made.
This is not enough?
What part of 'some bugs are system specific' do you not understand? It means that something can be working on your system, but not on my system or someone else's system, and it will
still be a bug. So no, I'm not kidding. I didn't even watch your clip because I didn't need to in order to know that this bug exists.
Now that I
have watched your clip though, I have to say that no, it is not enough, because as Hendrick says, it doesn't show any easing on position keyframes at all, or at least not in a way that is easily discernible (and I don't know why you have a video showing easing on zoom keyframes when no one complained about that). Yes there is a curve in the timeline graph but it certainly doesn't seem to do anything!
So, just because you are being so needlessly difficult about this, and for some reason saying to multiple forum members that their problems do not really exist, I have made a video which I invite you to watch:
It shows the following:
1. In the Edit page, a clip moves across the screen. No easing has been applied.
2. I duplicate the clip, put it on a track above, and apply easing to both keyframes via the Inspector.
3. Just for good measure, I open up the timeline clip graph and verify the easing there as well.
4. On playback,
no easing appears to take place.
5. To prove without a shadow of a doubt that there is no easing, I now apply a Difference composite mode to this clip which will show any difference between the motion of this clip and the one in the track below. With the exception of a glitch for 2 random frames of about 2 pixels in width, there is no difference.
6. Now in the Fusion page, I apply the exact same transformation via a Transform node. Again, at first there is no easing applied (playback isn't so smooth but luckily it doesn't have to be)
7. I copy this transform node, and apply easing in the Spline editor.
8. Playing back each transform node in the 2 monitors clearly shows (even despite the jerky playback) that easing is applied to the node with easing (left monitor), and not to the one that doesn't have it (right monitor)
9. For good measure, I again apply a Difference composite mode using a Merge node, proving that easing on position keyframes works as expected in the Fusion page.
And as if my video wasn't enough, here are a couple of screenshots of this transformation in the Edit page, with the Transform Overlay enabled. This first one shows what it looks like with no easing applied.
- TransformOverlay_Linear.png (480.29 KiB) Viewed 10043 times
Notice the completely even spacing between each of the points that represent position at different points in time. Now, here is what it looks like with easing selected:
- TransformOverlay_Easing.png (483.12 KiB) Viewed 10043 times
There's no difference between the two.
I'm not asking you to make another video, though you can if you want, but are you really saying that on your system, if you have the Transform Overlay enabled, and right click on a Position keyframe in the Inspector, and then select Ease In or Ease Out on a keyframe, that there is a change in the display of the overlay? Because if so, I'd like to see screen grabs please.