![]() Playlist Group cues have an orange outline with square corners. You can learn more about Timeline Group cues in the Timeline tab section below. This means you can order cues inside a Timeline Group cue however you prefer. ![]() Since all child cues start at once, their order within the Timeline Group cue doesn’t matter, technically. If any of the child cues have pre-waits, of course, those pre-waits will start counting down when the Timeline Group is started. If the Timeline Group cue was standing by and started via a, the playhead will advance to the next cue after the Timeline Group cue. When a Timeline Group is started, all its children start simultaneously. Timeline Groups have a green border with square corners. Group cues have five modes which can be set in the Mode tab of the inspector. You can collapse all Group cues in the workspace by using the keyboard shortcut ( ⇧ period). Group cues behave exactly the same way whether they are collapsed or expanded. ![]() Once a Group cue is created, it can be collapsed or expanded for visual simplicity using the gray triangular indicator to the left of the Group cue’s name. If you create a Group cue while two or more other cues are selected, those cues will be placed inside the newly created Group cue. The default keyboard shortcut to create a Group cue is ⌘0. The cues within a Group, called “child” cues, can be any type of cue including other Group cues, and will behave in one of several ways depending on the mode of the “parent” Group. The Group cue is a type of cue which contains other cues.
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