joan wrote:For the shortcut issue, after thinking more about it, I think the best way would be to use the existing distinction of showing/hiding the common controls. There is even the F5 shortcut to toggle it already. If the common controls are hidden, the videos should really behave as two completely independent videos.
permanently lock dual video playback in their synchronized state based on the working zone starting points
I am not sure what you mean by that, can you clarify the intent?
I apologize for the necropost, and I see that you have actually added a feature to deal with this that works relatively well. I just figured out what the "Synchronize videos on the current Frames" button does. My only issue now is that it is just a bit unclear as to which individual video has precedence over timeline position:
For instance, when the two videos are "synchronized by a frame":
-If you move video 1 ahead to find an event and then hit the common play control, the video skips back to match the video 2 point further behind in the timeline.
-If you move video 2 ahead to find an event and then hit the common play control, the video skips back to match the video 1 point further behind in the timeline.
-If you move a video back in the timeline individually the furthest point back in time is used.
This is a consistent behaviour, but if I scan ahead to find a specific event, it is very frustrating to have to find the event again after the video jumps back in time. This is of course only an issue if I didn't remember to mark a "key image."
Perhaps using the last moved individual video marker as the jump point for synchronization would be better, or have this as an option?
Drew Read