![]() ![]() ![]() Another option is to just use an online tool. See my above comment on how to do that conversion, and also a screenshot for where to find the timestamp in OFS. Splitting - Step 3 - Determine timestampsĭetermine the start and end time stamps of each clip that you want using OFS. ![]() To calculate the total milliseconds, you just need to do a little math. There are 1,000 milliseconds in 1 second. There are 60,000 milliseconds in 1 minute. There are 3,600,000 milliseconds in 1 hour. For example, a timestamp of 2 hours, 35 minutes, 49 seconds, and 578 milliseconds (02:35:49.578) would end up being 9,349,578 ms. You will need to input the timestamp as a number in milliseconds, not a timestamp. One final note if you’re using the fsVideoMergerSplitter tool. Let me know if you need more explanation or examples. If you’re not careful (like I wasn’t), you will get frustrated because your spreadsheet software might not use semicolons as delimiters by default. One thing to note with this tool: it uses the. I’ve used it many times, and I highly suggest it. It was made by and it can be found in this topic: Funscript&Video merger / splitter - Software - EroScripts. It can be used to split up and then merge video AND their associated funscripts at the same time. There is a tool that could really help with what you’re trying to do. So you will need to keep an eye out for that. However, some tools (like the default settings in VSDC) actually treat that as frames inside that second. Different tools treat the “.000” in a different way. Here’s a thing that confused me at first, and you may be experiencing. When I do manage to figure out how to get to the exact timecodes of the beginning and end of my clip, how do I cut out that section of the script and paste it into a new one? I don’t even know how to get to an exact timecode in the script because I can’t figure out how to type in the numbers. I’ve opened OFS, and I’m already lost on how to proceed. I’ve used OFS for creating scripts from scratch, but I’ve never used it for this purpose. The next tricky part is now making one script from many pieces. I’m just doing a simple test with five clips, all from the same video, and it’s already driving me nuts. It’s also not obvious to me which one of those it’s showing me. At the top of Metadata it just says “timecode,” but sometimes it shows the timecode for the beginning of the clip and sometimes it shows the timecode for the end of the clip. In the edit section there’s an Inspector tab, and under “file” it shows the metadata. However I’m having a very hard time figuring out how to find the source timecode for the end of the clip. I know how to find the source timecode for the start of all my clips which I’ll need for finding it in the script. So far I know how to chop up clips and move them around. I’m new to the software, and there’s a lot here, so I’m still learning the very basics of it. I’m using Davinci Resolve for creating the video component of the compilation. ![]()
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