![]() Closing a tab or a panel now takes a trip under that new menu with the exception of tabs in the timeline. are located under the Settings wrench.Īnd there are no longer little close X’s to the right of each tab as apparently people were accidentally closing too many windows. Above is that menu for the new Source window. The close and window options are now under a little menu to the right of a tab. Many things beyond video scopes were in that menu. I think this is a good thing as there’s less clutter and menus all around but it definitely takes getting used to since we’ve lived with those upper right-hand corner menu options for so long.Ībove is the Source window flyout menu in the old PPro. Other less interface related options have been moved to the Settings wrench menu. Many of those options have been moved into a pulldown menu that’s to the right of each tab. That would often include the Undock and Close Panel as well as some specific window functionality. The biggest interface change that tripped me up was the removal of the little fly out menus from the upper right corner of all the windows. Though not everyone is happy with the blue. If you remember the cluttered Adobe Premiere Pro of old this current interface is something you probably thought you’d never see. The buttons and other interface elements now just look cleaner. More than that I’m a fan of interface refreshes in general as I think it keeps them more engaging as long as it don’t break things. The track selectors now get colored as well. The old yellow highlights and outlines are on the left. And I have started at it for hours on end. ![]() I like the blue over the yellow of before as I think it’s easier on the eyes when staring at it for hours on end. Gone are the yellow high-lights and outlines of windows and that is replaced with a brand-new blue. It’s darker and the preference won’t lighten the interface to the near white that it was before. The first thing you’ll notice is the interface. I’d have posted this sooner but I’ve been editing! We dissected the features when this update was announced but now that we’ve had the chance to work with it we can dig in a bit deeper. This method should also works with other Adobe products, like Premiere Pro, Illustrator, Dreamweaver, InDesign, After Effects, Photoshop.It was announced at IBC and shipped at Adobe MAX (I wonder if this will become the norm?) and it’s another big update to Adobe Premiere Pro. When you drag a floating panel in this way, drop zones will appear and you can put floating window back to become docked again. To dock a floating panel in Adobe Audition CC and other Adobe products, you will need to click and drag the title part of the panel. This simply moves a floating panel to a new location. You can drag this white bar of a undocked panel to move it anywhere around the workspace. When a panel becomes floating in a separate window, a white bar appears at the top of the panel with the close button at the top right corner. To re-dock a floating or undocked panel in Adobe Audition is very easy, although not intuitive. How to dock a float panel in Adobe Audition CC? I don’t want to reset the workspace so as not to lose the whole customized layout. When I close the window and reopen it from the “window” tab or restart the program, it becomes floating again. I was trying to join two audio clips into one using Audition, and can’t figure out how to redock a floating panel. Some people however may run into a problem with redock the floating panel in Adobe products. You can also grab the panel title part (header section) and move it outside of the workspace to make it a floating window. Just click the menu after the panel title, and choose Undock Panel from the drop-down menu so the panel floats above the application window and other panels in the workspace. For example, we can drag a panel around the program window to dock or undock it to other panels. Adobe allows users to customize the workspace to suit their working style.
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