6. GUI orientation
6.19 Programming Menu > Diagram area
General
The middle of the Programming Page is the Programming diagram area where the
Program
,
Preview
and
AUX
screens are com-
posed.
Description
Each Program/Preview screen can be viewed individually or all of the screens can be shown simultaneously by selecting the corre-
sponding tab on the top of the Program window.
On the top left corner has a label that shows the name of the destination.
Image 6-39
1
Lock icon indicates whether the PGM destination is locked. When locked, the Program screen can only change after a
Mix or Cut transition. When the program screen is unlocked, the user can click on a layer that is on PGM and move or
resize it. The user can also assign a different Source into that layer or adjust the background.
2
Preview screen where the program is composed before is transitioned to program.
3
Users can zoom in / out of the diagram area, in from 25% to 150%, in 25% increments.
4
BGND Input tab. This is the menu where users drop the assigned Background inputs preview screens.
5
Selected sources are dropped in the layers de
fi
ned in the preview screen. A layer can be placed outside or partially in
the preview area.
6
The Destination tab can be clicked to arm the Destination and become part of the next transition.
7
A small arrow on the left hand side of Destination name expands or collapses the Destination view.
8
Users can manually control the transition by clicking on the bar or by sliding the mouse.
Layer and Source into the previous screen
Users can drag layers to the preview screen as long as the layer is not on program. In the example below, since no source has been
assigned to the layer, the layer will be black and default to a square shape.
112
R5905948 E2 12/12/2014
Summary of Contents for Event Master E2
Page 1: ...E2 User s guide R5905948 00 12 12 2014...
Page 8: ...Table of contents 4 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 16: ...2 Safety 12 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 32: ...3 General 28 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 82: ...6 GUI orientation Image 6 8 78 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 94: ...6 GUI orientation Image 6 20 90 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 115: ...6 GUI orientation Image 6 37 Thumbnail view Image 6 38 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014 111...
Page 186: ...7 System Setup 182 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 192: ...8 Updating firmware 188 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 196: ...9 General operation example Image 9 3 192 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 213: ...9 General operation example Image 9 25 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014 209...
Page 216: ...9 General operation example 212 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 220: ...10 Maintenance 10 2 Process Overview Flow chart Image 10 2 216 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 281: ...10 Maintenance Disregard the heatsink from the spare kit R5905948 E2 12 12 2014 277...
Page 282: ...10 Maintenance 278 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 288: ...11 Environmental information 284 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 298: ...B Remote Control Protocol 294 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 299: ...C Troubleshooting C TROUBLESHOOTING R5905948 E2 12 12 2014 295...
Page 300: ...C Troubleshooting 296 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...