6511.1.1 File OperationsA scrollbar at right accommodates long playlists when necessary. Icons in the playlist can be re-orderedquickly and easily using familiar drag and drop techniques. The playlist can even be altered duringplayback (of course, if the currently playing item is removed, playback stops immediately).An Alias (by default, the item’s filename) is displayed below the icon. Items in the CLIP player playlist also showtheir duration. Clicking an item in the playlist selects it. Standard Shift + click and Ctrl + click multi-selectionoperations are supported, and all selected items are denoted by a white border around their icon.• Click the large + (Add Media) button at left beneath the playlist pane to open the Media Browser (seeSection 11.1.3). Alternatively, double-click in an empty part of the Playlist pane.• Newly-added files become selected items in the Playlist pane.• Right-click in the playlist pane to show a menu with context-relevant items from the following list(operations affect selected playlist items):o Cuto Copyo Pasteo Removeo Properties• Standard Cut, Copy, Paste and Delete keystrokes are supported for playlist entries.• Un-playable (missing, corrupt, or unsupported) file icons are dimmed.Hint: Multi-selection is supported for most operations, including Set Duration (applies to Still and Title only).Most of the clip context menu items are self-explanatory, but let’s talk about one of them in just a bit more detail.11.1.2 PropertiesDisplay NameThe Properties panel allows you to edit the DisplayName for a file in the playlist. This entry defaults to thefilename, but is actually a local alias, or ‘nickname’.Editing the name does not actually change thename of the file on your hard drive. Roll the mouseover the icon to see the true filename and its path.CommentThe Comment box permits to enter metadata toassociate with the file.Hint: Both the Display Name and Comment box content for the selected clip are available asDataLink keys, which can in turn be served to live title pages. See Section 7.1.3 and Section 12.2.FIGURE 62