1394: The term ‘1394’ applies to OHCI-compliant IEEE-1394,
FireWire, DV or i.LINK interfaces, ports and cables.
Analog: The term ‘analog’ applies to 8mm, Hi8, VHS, SVHS, VHS-
C or SVHS-C camcorders, VCRs and tapes, and to Composite/RCA
and S-Video cables and connectors.
Buttons, menus, dialog boxes and windows
Names of buttons, menus and related items are written in italics to
distinguish them from the surrounding text, whereas window and
dialog names are written with initial capital letters. For example:
Click the Edit menu button to open your menu in the Menu Editor.
Choosing menu commands
The right arrowhead symbol () denotes the path for hierarchical
menu items. For example:
Select File Burn Disc Image.
Context menus
A ‘context menu’ is a pop-up list of commands that appears when
you click with the right mouse-button on certain areas of the
application interface. Depending where you click, a context menu
may pertain either to an editable object (like a clip on an editing
timeline), to a window, or to a zone such as a control panel. Once
open, context menus behave just like the ones on the main menu bar.
Context menus are available in most parts of the Pinnacle Studio
interface. Our documentation generally takes for granted that you
know how to open and use them.
Mouse clicks
When a mouse click is required, the default is always a left-click
unless otherwise specified, or unless the click is to open a context
menu:
Right-click and select Title Editor. (Or, one might say, “Select
Title Editor from the context menu.”)