A common practice in video editing is the ability to jump from one part of the timeline to another: jumping from one \textit{cut} to another or from one \textit{label} to another or even from one \textit{keyframe} to another. Using shortcuts in these cases is even more advantageous. In the next table we summarize these alternative shortcuts of the main jumps.
\end{longtable}
A common practice in video editing is the ability to jump from one part of the timeline to another: jumping from one \textit{cut} to another or from one \textit{label} to another or even from one \textit{keyframe} to another. Using shortcuts in these cases is even more advantageous. In the next table we summarize these alternative shortcuts of the main jumps.
-\begin{longtable}[h] { | p{7cm} | p{6.5cm} | }
+\begin{longtable}[h] {|p{7cm}|p{6.5cm}|}
\toprule
\multicolumn{2}{|c|} {\textcolor{CinRed}{\textbf{Alternatives - Some jumps backward and forward}}} \\
\midrule
\toprule
\multicolumn{2}{|c|} {\textcolor{CinRed}{\textbf{Alternatives - Some jumps backward and forward}}} \\
\midrule
+%begin{latexonly}
\endhead
\endhead
+%end{latexonly}
Jump backward to the next cut & Alt+Left Arrow, 'A' \\
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Jump backward to the next cut & Alt+Left Arrow, 'A' \\
\hline
@@ -814,5+818,5 @@ A common practice in video editing is the ability to jump from one part of the t
\hline
Jump forward to the next Auto & Ctrl+Shift+Alt+Right Arrow (only works on UbuntuStudio) \\
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Jump forward to the next Auto & Ctrl+Shift+Alt+Right Arrow (only works on UbuntuStudio) \\