Undo & Redo
Full Edit History: Step Back Through Any Action
Every editing action in Bitcut can be reversed. The undo and redo buttons in the toolbar let you step backward and forward through your edit history, so you can experiment freely without worrying about making mistakes.
How to Undo and Redo
- Undo — tap the undo button (curved arrow pointing left) in the editor toolbar. The most recent action is reversed.
- Redo — tap the redo button (curved arrow pointing right) to reapply an undone action.
You can tap undo multiple times to step back through several actions. The redo button is available as long as you haven't made a new edit after undoing.
Multi-level history: Bitcut maintains a full history of your editing session. You can undo many steps in a row — all the way back to the state when you first opened the project.
What Can Be Undone
Undo works for all editing operations:
- Trimming — restores clip edges to their previous positions
- Splitting — merges the two halves back into one clip
- Reordering — moves the clip back to its previous position
- Deleting — brings back a removed clip
- Speed changes — reverts to the previous playback rate
- Settings changes — restores previous audio, subtitle, and style settings
When Redo Clears
If you undo several steps and then make a new edit, the redo history is replaced by the new action. This is standard editing behavior — the new edit becomes the latest point in your history, and the previously undone actions are no longer reachable via redo.
Experiment freely: Knowing you can undo, try bold edits — aggressive trims, different clip orders, speed changes. If it doesn't work, a few taps of undo gets you right back.
Related Guides
- Trimming Clips: Start & End — non-destructive trim adjustments
- Splitting Clips — split and undo-split
- Reordering Clips — rearrange and undo