![]() ![]() Shared files, Recents, and Favorites also appear in the media adding dialog box, and you can color code them as well. Getting your own clips onto the timeline involves choosing them from iCloud Drive, On My iPad, or another cloud source such as Google Drive or Microsoft OneDrive. This eases finding the transition, video or audio effect, object, or soundtrack you’re looking to use. The source and effect panel in the top right has something I greatly appreciate: a search box. Unlike in iMovie, but more like in most other desktop video editors, you move the playhead to go back and forth through the timeline rather than moving the whole timeline while the playhead remains still. To change the track height, you tap the Options button, switching to the Appearance tab, where you can also turn on and off (very narrow) audio meters. You can pinch and unpinch to zoom in and out, or drag a finger to move the timeline. Touch gestures on the timeline work just as you’d expect them to. You can also turn off the source panel to get a larger preview window. You can resize the relative width of the viewer, switch it to full-screen, or change it to a floating (but oddly non-resizeable) picture-in-picture window. You drag up on the top of the timeline to enlarge it or down to push it out of view. ![]() When you open the sample project, you see a timeline view that looks remarkably similar to Final Cut Pro on the Mac, with some important differences, most of which make the program easier and clearer to use. Another side panel for account and app options is hideable with a button. Intuitive InterfaceĪt the top level of the project and media hierarchy, your projects show up in a panel on the left-side panel. The sample (a manageable 400MB download) shows footage from a Lunar New Year celebration. I’m a big fan of this approach, as opposed to apps that dump you in the deep end without a paddle. When you first start the app, it offers a sample movie project to help you get going. If you bought Final Cut for macOS, you still need to pay this subscription to use the iPad app. You get a one-month free trial, but you have to choose a $4.99 per month or $49 per year plan. When you first launch the Final Cut app on the iPad, you need to pick a subscription. Getting Started With Final Cut on the iPad ![]()
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