So what do all these Mogrts do, exactly?
Last updated
Last updated
You should now see many individual Mogrts flying onto your timeline one by one. Before doing anything else in the extension, it’s best to let them finish. If you still have the Yellow Captions on your Premiere caption track above the timeline, hide or remove them, and now you will see that each word is being displayed at the moment that the speaker is saying them. SubMachine has parsed your SRT file and broken it into phrases, based on your maximum character limit. Each phrase alternates between two video tracks, so you can clearly see where one unique phrase ends and the next will begin.
Not only was your transcript broken into phrases, it was also broken down into Individual Words.
Six Words, Six Mogrts.
In the animation above, you can see as we move from each Mogrt to the next, another word is printed on screen. At the same time, the “Word Progression” value for the .Mogrt increases by one. There are six words, and six Mogrts. You can also see that the Text Input field in the mogrt contains the entire Phrase. When generated, each mogrt shares the same essential properties, including text. The top of your mogrt has a "Word Progression" slider that keeps track of which words have been spoken. All SubMachine mogrts will have this Word Progression slider as the core engine to allow word by word animation and timing to work.