Try the first_frame and last_frame inline attributes as I mentioned above.

Using Frank's suggestion to use inrange():

!inrange(frame, Read1.first_frame, Read1.last_frame)

On Wed, Apr 6, 2011 at 5:00 PM, David Schnee <[email protected]> wrote:

>  Thank you (and Frank) this is great, but I also want to swap out having to
> manual input the '50' and '117', instead grab the input's start and end
> frame?
>
>
> On 04/06/2011 04:25 PM, Tim BOWMAN wrote:
>
> Not sure what sort of offsets you're dealing with, but if you need a simple 
> "on in this range" tingy, try this in the disable knob: inrange(frame, 50, 
> 117)
>
> -t
>
> On Apr 6, 2011, at 7:10 PM, David Schnee wrote:
>
>
>
>  How can I do this?  If I have a range of frames say from 17-84, and I 'start 
> at' 50, need to animate another node to turn ON on frame 50, and then OFF on 
> frame 118.  Is there an expression I can use to automate this? (If it's uses 
> first and last frame, it would need include any time offsets or start at 
> frame inputs along with it)
>
> Cheers,
> -Schnee
> --
>
> \/ davids / comp \/ 177
> /\ tippettstudio /\ imo
>
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>  __
>
> Tim BOWMAN917.232.5830 | http://[email protected]
>
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>
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> /\ tippettstudio /\ hp7
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