Thanks Nathan, Ben.
For some reason I had thought there was a Python method for it, but my
memory must be incorrect.
Cheers,
Jordan
On Nov 19, 2014 4:19 PM, "Ben Dickson" <ben.dick...@rsp.com.au> wrote:

> Simplest/dumbest/most-general way is to add a Text node before the
> retime containing the [frame] expression, and read the number after the
> retime
>
> Doesn't work for Python, but.. does work better than the metadata
> insomuch as it'll show you if, say, two frames are being blended
> together (because the two numbers will be mixed together)
>
> On 20/11/14 09:58, Jordan O wrote:
> > I thought I knew how to do this, maybe I've forgotten.
> > Is there a simple way to query what source frame number is coming from?
> > Say you use a time offset and a time warp, how can you know from that
> > node pythonically which frame is coming from source?
> >
> > I suppose exr meta data may be the closest thing I can find.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Jordan
> >
> >
> >
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>
> --
> ben dickson
> 2D TD | ben.dick...@rsp.com.au
> rising sun pictures | www.rsp.com.au
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