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  • Hi, I got this same issue importing XML from DaVinci 15 back to FCPX.

    DTD validation failed. (Element spine content does not follow the DTD, expecting (audio | video | clip | title | mc-clip | ref-clip | sync-clip | asset-clip | audition | gap | transition)*, got (asset-clip asset-clip gap asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-clip asset-…)

    Any thoughts how to repair this XML?

    -Jared

  • Jared Jacobsen

    April 21, 2012 at 7:58 am in reply to: Final Cut Pro X Export as Quicktime Movie

    I still have this problem but for some reason only when I am importing footage from my panasonic which uses a P2 card. Not sure why this is? Did you solve your problem by changing the project settings?

  • Jared Jacobsen

    December 15, 2011 at 8:58 pm in reply to: Final Cut Pro X Export as Quicktime Movie

    Thanks for all your input. Unfortunately trashing preferences and rendered files didn’t help nor did exporting in any of the other codec options. When I reimport the footage and put it into a new project I don’t have any problems with the export (even when I do a variety of color correcting). Any further suggestions on how to avoid encountering this problem on future projects? Should I just reinstall FCP X?

    Thanks!

  • Jared Jacobsen

    December 14, 2011 at 5:08 am in reply to: Final Cut Pro X Export as Quicktime Movie

    Thanks for your response. The strange thing is that the clips imported fine and played fine in the timeline. The problem occured when exporting…(later when I played around a little the problem began to occur in the timeline and appeared perhaps tied to the color correction because when I turned off color correction the problem disappeared – in the timeline anyway not in the exported file). I am going to trash the preferences and the render files and see if this helps. Do you have any recommendations based on your experience?

    Thanks!

    -Jared

  • Jared Jacobsen

    December 14, 2011 at 3:10 am in reply to: Final Cut Pro X Export as Quicktime Movie

    Thanks so much…I’ll give it a try.

  • Jared Jacobsen

    December 14, 2011 at 2:17 am in reply to: Final Cut Pro X Export as Quicktime Movie

    Thank you for your response but I’m a little confused…so I should trash everything in my render folder for that project (high quality data, peaks data, and thumbnail media folders ) and then quit FCPX? I’m also unclear about the next step of “trashing” my preferences…

    Thanks so much for your help…

    -Jared

  • Jared Jacobsen

    December 14, 2011 at 12:52 am in reply to: Final Cut Pro X Export as Quicktime Movie

    Sorry. Here is the link again…it should work now.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAjwAtxYIeE

    I believe the footage is HDV…it’s from a Panasonic HPX-170 (which uses P2 cards)

  • Jared Jacobsen

    December 14, 2011 at 12:14 am in reply to: Final Cut Pro X Export as Quicktime Movie

    Hey, thanks for responding…Actually I’ve tried several codecs all with the same result. I tried dragging the corrupted .mov file (which I’m viewing on my mac) back into the timeline and it doesn’t look any different than Quicktime player. Any ideas?

    The saved .mov file looks like this:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAjwAtxYIeE

    Thanks!

  • Jared Jacobsen

    December 13, 2011 at 10:05 pm in reply to: Final Cut Pro X Export to Quicktime Movie

    OK. Thanks.

  • Jared Jacobsen

    October 19, 2011 at 6:05 pm in reply to: Macintosh Operating System

    Thanks!

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