Looks like I timed this perfectly. lol
I have to say, I'm rather mystified at all the drama. Either that or I'm just missing something critical...
Using SHIFT, ALT, CTRL, and CTRL+ALT with the left and right cursor moves the time corresponding to settings for VERY SHORT JUMP, SHORT JUMP, MEDIUM JUMP, and LONG JUMP. These correspond to settings under In TOOLS/PREFERENCES/INTERFACE/Hotkeys Settings. By default, I think the settings were 3 seconds, 10 seconds, 30 seconds, and 1 minute but I changed this so long ago that I really can't remember. I have mine set to 1 second, 3 seconds, 7 seconds, and 15 seconds. Anything longer and I'll just drag it.
This isn't frame by frame. At 30fps that's a lot of content in that one second but it's important to remember that frames don't actualy exist in any of the standard media files. If you need to work at the frame level then you should probably be using a true purpose-built editor and not a media player. But it really isn't that much of a hassle to jump back to just before the desired frame and then roll forward, one frame at a time.
For the devs, I am curious if this couldn't be a bit further refined. Maybe allowing the input of a decimal which would allow the user make adjustments and further refine it. The result would be through trial and error on the user's part....garbage in/garbage out.
With that said, what I can't seem to figure out is why the dev(s) feel so combative about people asking for more fine-tuned control. It seems to me that someone a little more skilled at PR should be handling such issues. Since there doesn't appear to be such a person in the company, and since I've enjoyed the benefit of using VLC's FREE player since it first launched, I'm going to go ahead and write a response that can be copied, edited, and pasted anywhere that it makes sense the next time it comes up.
"I'm sorry. VLC is first and foremost a video player, not an editor. We have built-in a wide variety of tools over the years to allow for an enormous amount of customization when viewing while providing support and features that far exceed any other in the market. Since inception, our primary goal has always been to combine the greatest possible compatibility and reliability in a product that anyone can use on nearly any platform for FREE. For comparison with other players, check out he Wikipedia article that compares video player software at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compariso ... r_software . The article covers nearly 30 video players and 151 different attributes laid out in 13 categories. Of those, we hit roughly 112 (there are roughly 20 question marks and plugins likely expand it even further). The closest any of the others get is 96. It drops off quickly from there. We win in nearly every category. In the few categories that we don't win, we're still no more than 1-2 items off (or maybe not when you consider plugins) while the winner fails to rank highly at all in other categories. For instance, in the "Production video format ability" there are only three players. We are one of them. We're nearly matched with the other two and neither of those is our next closes competitor in other categories.
There are several players on the list that must be purchased, or worse, subscribed to with regular repeated payments. In addition, there are a number of things not covered in the comparison, likely because there is little else to compare to. The ability to work with damaged files and repair them without having to be use an editor is something that we're extremely proud of. Often VLC can play right through a damaged file without the user noticing there is damage until they try to play it in another player and it fails. It can also repair and export into other formats. The number of API bindings, browser plugins, and the number of plugins and skins available is nothing short of amazing. On Windows, Linux, macOS, and some other Unix-like platforms, VLC also provides an NPAPI plugin, which enables users to view QuickTime, Windows Media, MP3, and Ogg files embedded in websites without using additional software.
Along with several additional unique attributes, VLC is by far the most capable player available...and we provide it at the bargain-basement cost of "FREE". This broad support for features, including repair capabilities and control over the rendering leads some people to assume that VLC is an editor. It is not.
While it may technically be possible to render individual "frame-by-frame" control for select formats on select platforms, doing so would require significant work, greater product diversion across platforms, and changes to a platform that has long been considered the most stable and capable player available and would likely cause more problems and bugs. Also, once we open that door we would then be subject to "feature creep" on one end while trying to maintain more complex compatibility and playability on the other. It simply doesn't make sense to risk breaking the superior compatibility and reliability of VLC as a PLAYER to allow a small handful of people that want to edit when there are free purpose-built tools available for editing that we could never expect to keep up with. Most video editors control the chaos by limiting the compatibility and playback features.
While we would love to be everything to everyone, it just doesn't make sense to go down this path. The last thing we want to do is give up being the master of playback to become a Jack-of-all-trades. Since there are plenty of tools out there designed specifically around editing, our advice is to let VLC do the playing and for editing, get an editor."
I know this response needs work. This is particularly true with the comparison numbers as I believe many of the places where VLC is not marked as a feature are simply because the authors didn't know for sure, or the feature may be available with a plugin which widens the gap even further. I just wanted to give you an example of a proper response to this debate that didn't have to be a debate. The responses went from slightly rude to outright self-righteous contempt which is never good even if you are providing VLC for free.
Anyways, time for work. Gotta run.