Computer Science, asked by PragyaTbia, 1 year ago

Write the difference between storyboard and Time line?

Answers

Answered by neerajtungala
14
Storyboard and Timeline

The area where you create and edit your project is displayed in two views, the storyboard and the timeline. You can switch between these two views when making a movie.

In Help, the following notation is used to indicate the difference between working on the storyboard or timeline.

Storyboard/timeline. Indicates that the task can be performed on both the storyboard and timeline.Storyboard. Indicates that the task can be performed on the storyboard only.Timeline. Indicates that the task can be performed on the timeline only.

The next two pages will tell you what you can do in each of these views and show you what they look like.

Answered by Mehwish09
14

Answer:

Movie Maker's timeline and storyboard are similar in use and format. Yet, despite these similarities, you should know the difference between them, because each offers distinct advantages over the other.

Although the previous chapter covers the storyboard in depth ( see 28 About Movie Maker's Storyboard ), it's critical that you fully understand how the storyboard and timeline both work in conjunction with each other to display two different kinds of information for you. When you place clips on the storyboard, those clips also appear on the timeline. If you place clips on the timeline, the storyboard also receives the clips.

The following are the primary differences between a storyboard and a timeline:

The storyboard shows a thumbnail image of the clip's first frame. Therefore, when you look at the storyboard, you can easily tell which clip is which from the picture shown on the storyboard. The sequence of your video production is also clear from those images. Only video clips and any transitions that might appear between them appear on the storyboard; no audio clips can reside on the storyboard.

Only the storyboard appears here; it shows video clips and transitions but no audio.

The timeline is concerned more with time and less with sequence. Use the timeline to measure the length of your project's clips as you place them into your final project. The timeline displays your project's video clips on the Video track (depending on the clip's length, you will see some or all of the thumbnail for that clip). The timeline also shows transitions between clips on the Transition track , your project's Audio track , the Audio/Music track , and the Title Overlay track .

The timeline shows video clips, transitions between clips (Transition track), the video's audio (the Audio track), audio clips you've added (the Audio/Music track), and titles or credits you've added (the Title Overlay track).

You will frequently use both the Movie Maker storyboard and timeline, and you'll quickly switch between both views as you work on a project by pressing Ctrl+T or by clicking the Show Storyboard and Show Timeline buttons . The immediate difference between these two display areas is that the storyboard has less clutter and eases your job of arranging the clip order. You'll use the timeline to adjust the visual width of a clip's thumbnail to match its length. If a clip is short, you might not be able to see much of the first clip's thumbnail image on the timeline, but you will always see the image on the storyboard.

The storyboard enables you to manage the sequence of clips. The timeline enables you to manage the clips' timing.

The timeline shows far more details than the storyboard by displaying the Video, Audio, Audio/Music, Transition , and Title Overlay tracks for your movie. The timeline also enables you to see how each clip fits within the time frame of the movie.

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