kinvermark wrote:As you say, you can use keyboard shortcuts - I have mapped F7 & F8 for just this task. My Speed editor is right beside the keyboard so this is a quite natural two handed edit.
I wonder if anyone is using a macro keypad like the Elgato streamdeck or Loopdeck for extending the Speed Editor's functionality?
I’m using a streamdeck, and plan to use it to fill in the gaps. So far, I’ve only been messing around with old footage for a few days, trying to identify what’s missing, and what would be helpful on the streamdeck. I’ve also been trying to familiarize myself with the cut page, which I’ve largely ignored until now. I start my next editing project tomorrow, so that’ll be a better test.
It also took a while to fix all of the shortcuts that broke with the R17 update, but I think I’ve got most of them ironed out now.
I was using a modified version of the shortcut set that shipped with SideshowFX’s Icon set for the streamdeck, but that set also included a lot of strange departures from Resolve’s defaults.
To get back to a more factory-friendly set, which included the customizations I liked but excluded the ones I didn’t, I exported R17’s default set, exported the customized, outdated R16 set, alphabetized them both in Python, did a line-by-line diff comparison, and took notes on what to change, then made the changes to streamdeck, keyboard maestro, and Resolve.
The moral of this story is that it’s easy to waste more time fiddling with streamdecks and macro software than they’re likely to save you over the long run, especially considering all of the shortcuts you’re going to want to change when the next doodad or Resolve version comes out.
And so far, the thing I wish they’d included most on the speed editor is a normal overwrite edit. It’s weird that they included so many buttons that you use infrequently, and so few of the ones you use frequently.