Hopefully someone will share their experience or possibly even a useful layman’s explanation. But video editing is already such a time consuming process – by the time you’re ready for export, you want to be done messing around. People who don’t seem to know the answer can tell you to look it up, use the presets, or just experiment. One is youtube/vimeo, the other is trying to get highest quality close to lossless, for archival or master copy. I’m assuming here, but I think people would have 2 main specific times for wanting to know GOP/B frame settings. B frames seem to be directly related to the GOP rate, but again I haven’t found anything useful online so far. But I’ve also seen settings in presets ranging from 1 to 120. So far, all I’ve been able to find out that might be relevant to some people, is that youtube recommends a (closed, whatever that means, maybe the checkbox for fixed?) GOP of half the frame rate (so 12 for 24fps, 15 for 30fps, 30 for 60 fps). If I find out anything of use, I’ll post it here – maybe it can be useful for someone else with the question. At least, that’s what I’m getting from the replies so far (google it, buy a book, just experiment). I think the honest answer is that nobody here knows. This is a support forum for the Shotcut, not video editing. In This Complete Shotcut Tutorial For Beginners, Learn How To Use Shotcut From Beginning To End Even With No Video Editing Experience Save Time and Grow your YouTube Channel. There are somewhat standardized presets with Shotcut, but it gives you the flexibility to change these values if you see fit. There are college courses to online webinars. You’ll have to dig through forums specifically for video editing to get your answers. You’re probably not going to find a lot of information that you may understand online. But Shotcut is not just used for YouTube. Any loss from there would be YouTube’s re-compression. Click on “Video codec: H.264” This only defines what one platform requires for video. With Shotcut, you could export as a Matroska file with H.264 video and WAV audio, meaning your mixdown master would go to YouTube with zero loss. If you’re going to post to YouTube, they clearly define how they expect their videos to be prepared and specifically tell you exactly what you need. If you don’t understand the terms, then do as suggested by googling the terms, not just what’s in the title, but all of the terms listed in Ken’s link. The above link that has posted is a really excellent general explanation. There are no typical settings with video recording or editing. There is no easy answer to your question.
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