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- #Ease and wizz mt mograph archive#
- #Ease and wizz mt mograph software#
- #Ease and wizz mt mograph code#
- #Ease and wizz mt mograph license#
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#Ease and wizz mt mograph code#
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
#Ease and wizz mt mograph license#
Replaced the “type” radio buttons with a popup menuĮliminated need to choose easingExpressions folder path (thanks to Jeff Almasol)įixed colour of text in popup menus - thanks to Jeff againīelow is the original BSD License for Robert Penner’s easing equations, followed by an identical license for the Ease and Wizz code that I’ve wrapped around them. Popup menu added so you can select which keyframes to affect (all, first two and last two, Allows you to apply easing expressions to curved motion paths, and to mask or shape layer paths. Added a more graceful catch if you try to add an expression to a mask path without the “Curvaceous” checkbox enabled. Changed function names that were clashing with Expression Toolbox. The popup menus and the “Curvaceous” checkbox now have tooltips for extra information. The type in the popup menus is now white, making it more legible on the default background. The inBounce behaviour was, inexplicably, identical to the outBounce behaviour.
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Reverted the type in the popup menus to a black colour, as it was illegible in CS5. The default period when using Elastic easing is now 0.81, rather than 0.8 (which may have been related to a rare rounding error). Removed the requirement in the documentation to “Allow scripts to write files and access network”. Caught a bug that left the easing-type popup blank if selecting Curvaceous when Elastic or Back were selected. Put global variables on a custom object and renamed functions to avoid namespace clashes. Reinstated the graceful catch for errors when applying expression to mask path without Curvaceous turned on.
#Ease and wizz mt mograph archive#
Extract the zip archive into the ScriptUI Panels folder. Applications/Adobe After Effects CC/ScriptsĬ:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe After Effects CC\Support Files\Scripts\Ĭreate a folder in Scripts called “ScriptUI Panels” (if there isn’t one already).Ģ. On my Mac it’s here (this path should be the same for different versions of AE, just the version number will change): Navigate to the After Effects Scripts folder. You can drag objects in the comp viewer, or move keyframes in the timeline, and the easing will be updated immediately.ġ. One advantage of using an expression for easing is that the keyframes are editable. I’ve adapted these equations to work as expressions in After Effects (for an introduction to After Effects expressions, check out Dan Ebberts’ excellent site). They’re applied with an After Effects-ish palette that can be docked, so it’s very easy to use.Ī while back, Flash guru Robert Penner created a suite of extremely useful easing equations that have been used to build thousands of websites worldwide. The obvious use is in motion, but they can be used on animated properties of any kind. Thanks for downloading Ease and Wizz, a set of expressions for After Effects that give you more ways to interpolate between values.