Track view area

 
 
 

You manage and manipulate the animation clips for your characters or the cache clips for your objects in the track view area of the Trax Editor.

See also Clip states.

Track hierarchy

The hierarchical relationships between tracks are shown by their positions in the track view area. You can organize your scene and create a hierarchy of clips by manipulating this relationship.

Characters and Objects

The top-most level of each track hierarchy is always the character (animation clips) or the object (geometry cache clips). A character in Trax can contain multiple tracks, subcharacters, or groups.

Groups

Groups contain arbitrary collections of animation clips for a single character. You can collapse and expand groups just like you would a character.

Subcharacters

When you add or display a character in Trax, all of its subcharacters are automatically placed under the character. Subcharacters and Groups exist on the same level under the character, and can be controlled in a similar manner. You do not need to have subcharacters to be able to work with a character’s animation in Trax.

Summaries

Each level in the Trax hierarchy has a summary. A summary gives you a high level of control over the collection of tracks under a character, group, subcharacter, or object.

You can collapse and expand summaries for characters, subcharacters, groups, or objects by clicking the arrow beside each of their names in their respective summaries.

The summary clip represents all the clips under your character, group, subcharacter, or object. You can drag the summary clip to move all the clips in all the tracks under a character, group, subcharacter, or object. You can also scale a summary clip by -dragging its beginning and end or by editing its Start and End frame numbers.

Soundtrack

You can display and play multiple audio waveforms in Trax. The Soundtrack lets you import .wav or .aiff audio files as clips. Once you import an audio file into Trax, you can then move and rename its audio clip.

The play priority of audio clips goes from the top-most clip to the bottom-most clip. Also, you can play only one audio clip at a time and any new audio clips that you add to your scene appear at the bottom of the stack of audio clips in the Soundtrack.

For example, if you have multiple audio tracks and clips that overlap in time, then the audio clip in the top-most track will always play instead of other audio clips on other tracks that are at the same position on the Trax timeline.

If you want to hear the audio clips that are present in your Soundtrack, see Work with audio in Trax for information on hearing audio clips present in Trax.

Information displayed on animation and geometry cache clips

Source In/Out

Start and end frame numbers for the range of frames from the source clip or geometry cache file contained in an animation or cache clip.

When you create an animation clip, a source clip is automatically generated in addition to the clip that is created in the track view area. The source clip is placed in the Visor, and can only be modified from that location. This protects the source clip from being accidentally modified. Any modifications you make to a source clip are reflected in all the clips that originate from that source clip. Source clips are useful if you want to access or revert back to the original animation for a character.

When you create or edit a geometry cache clip, its original cache data is preserved on disk as a Maya cache file (.mc).

When you trim a clip in Trax, you are excluding sections of animation or deformation from the beginning or end of a clip. This changes a clip’s Source In and Source Out times, but does not affect the source clip or cache file on disk.

Frame In/Out

Current start and end frame numbers for an animation or geometry cache clip. These numbers control when a clip takes effect.

Duration

This value is read-only.

Number of frames over which the current animation clip’s source clip, or current geometry cache clip’s cache file, takes place. This value is affected by any modifications to the source clip’s trimming values or changes to the cache file on disk. See Source clips.

Scale

The scale percentage for the current animation or geometry cache clip. The scale percentage is the multiplier on the length of the original animation clip or cache file. See Scale or Scale.

Editable Clip attributes

You can change any attributes (for example, name, scale and so on) displayed on animation or geometry cache clips by double-clicking on the attributes and entering a new value.

Clip interaction controls

Clips have hotspots which you can drag to produce various effects. For example, if you drag the top-right corner of a clip, you Trim an animation or geometry cache clip.

When you move your mouse pointer over a clip, white outlines appear around its hotspots when the pointer passes over them.

Move

Drag clips to move them in the track view area.

The Move cursor appears when you are moving a clip.

You can drag single animation or geometry cache clips upward and downward, or from side to side.

When you drag an animation clip upward or downward, and there is no track present above or below the animation clip you are dragging, then Maya creates a new track for the clip. See Add tracks. You can also move multiple animation clips at a time. See Multiple clip manipulator.

Trim

Drag the top corner clip hotspots to trim clips.

The Trim cursor appears when you are trimming a clip.

You can omit segments from the beginnings and ends of animation or geometry cache clips by trimming clips. This changes a clip’s Source In and Source Out times, but does not affect the source animation clip or cache file on disk. The segments that you omit from a clip using Trim are not deleted, and can be reinstated if the clip’s original length is restored.

Scale

Drag the lower corner clip hotspots to scale clips.

The Scale cursor appears when you are scaling a clip.

When you reduce (<100% of the original clip length) or scale down an animation or geometry cache clip, you are actually compressing the animation or deformations on the clip, so that the resulting animation or deformations appear faster or sped up.

When you scale (>100% original clip length) up an animation or geometry cache clip, you are actually extending the animation or deformations on the clip, so that the resulting animation or deformations appear slower.

Hold

-drag the upper corner of clips to create holds after the original clip. You can also create and edit holds for a clip from the Attribute Editor. See Hold clips or Hold geometry cache clips.

The Hold cursor appears when you are creating a hold for a clip.

You can create holds for you animation or geometry cache clips. A hold is a part or an extension of a clip where the last pose or deformation is held for a specified period of time. Holds are represented by the letter H and appear a lighter blue than the rest of the clip.

Cycle

-drag the lower corners of clips to create cycles before (pre-cycle) or after (post-cycle) the original clip. You can also create and edit cycles for a clip from the Attribute Editor. See Cycle clips or Cycle geometry cache clips.

The Cycle cursor appears when you are creating a cycle for a clip.

You can repeat an animation or deformation contained in a clip by extending the clip with duplicate animation or deformation sequences called cycles. You can create whole or partial cycles. The end of the original clip, and the beginning of the first cycle, is marked by a small vertical line. The end of each cycle sequence for a clip is marked by a small cycle tick or marker.

Cycles are represented by the letter C and appear a lighter blue than the rest of the clip.

Multiple clip manipulator

For animation clips only.

You can select multiple animation clips (-click) in one or more characters and move or scale them all at once using the clip manipulator.

For information on how to use the clip manipulator, see Move clips.

Related topics

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