Mark Grgurev wrote:Your answer to someone's suggestion to improve a $300 piece of software can't always be "Just buy a $1000 to $30,000 panel."
It's the only answer I have, since it's the way I solved the problem years and years ago.
Note there are very affordable small macro keyboards that are maybe only $100-$150 that will allow a lot of these functions, even if you choose to use a very tiny panel or none at all. XKeys makes some great ones, and if you have a little more money, Elgato's Streamdeck is even better. Combine that with a 3rd-party Macro program, and this will allow you to do quite a bit.
Jim Simon wrote:That method presumes the existence of a Grab. Not quite what I'm asking for here. I want to be able to select one ore more Group, Clip or Timeline nodes and then Cut/Copy/Paste them into a user-defiinable location on another Group, Clip or Timeline node tree, without additional hardware or any other via's. Simply put, I want the nodes in a node tree to behave like clips in a timeline.
I think by design, it doesn't quite work that way. There are ways of altering your way of operating to take advantage of how the program does work.
Resolve 16 does provide much more complex choices on what gets pasted or copied and what does not get copied in a node tree. Me personally, I use Fixed Node Trees pretty heavily so I have to be very careful how and where I do this, so you can see this methodology won't work for everybody.