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Blog entry by Sang Ingalls

How FileViewPro Supports Other File Types Besides CMMP

How FileViewPro Supports Other File Types Besides CMMP

A .CMMP file is typically a Camtasia MenuMaker project rather than a playable video, containing the structure and rules for DVD-style menus—pages, layouts, backgrounds, fonts, and button navigation—and referencing external thumbnails, graphics, and video paths, which is why moving it away from its asset folder causes missing-file errors; editing normally requires older Camtasia Studio/MenuMaker versions, while watching the actual content means opening the real media files instead.

Opening a .CMMP file requires MenuMaker from older Camtasia builds, since it’s a menu project rather than video; launch it via double-click or Open with, repair missing-media links if prompted, and install an older version if the file won’t load, while actual viewing is done through the real video files in the same folder.

Quick tips for a .CMMP file remind you it’s the map, not the movie, so search the directory for the real video files (. For those who have any concerns concerning exactly where and how you can use CMMP file description, it is possible to e mail us at our own webpage. mp4, .avi, .wmv, .mov, .m2ts or disc structures) and play those; if you need the menu project, don’t change the folder structure, relink assets as needed, rely on an older Camtasia/MenuMaker version if required, and retrieve missing media if the CMMP arrived without its asset folder.

A .CMMP file doesn’t carry continuous audio/video data, because it’s usually a MenuMaker project that stores menu instructions—pages, themes, button positions, navigation paths—and only links to real videos and images nearby, which is why it won’t play on its own and why moving assets causes "missing file" errors.

A "MenuMaker Project" indicates the .CMMP holds menu-structure instructions, including backgrounds, page layouts, button positions, labels, highlight states, and links that launch videos or switch pages, and since it doesn’t embed media, it expects to find thumbnails, backgrounds, and video files beside it, breaking when the folder structure changes.

A .CMMP file is filled with menu-layout definitions instead of media, specifying pages, backgrounds, template settings, fonts, and button geometry, along with logic mapping each button to a video, timestamp, or another page, plus highlight defaults and remote-direction links, and it depends on external videos, thumbnails, and artwork referenced by file paths, breaking if those assets are relocated or renamed.

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