by Bob » Tue Jul 01, 2014 2:56 pm
What you are talking about is called a ripple delete. Both Premiere Pro and Premiere Elements give you the choice of doing a ripple delete or a regular delete. But, for reasons only known to Adobe, the default type of delete you get is reversed in Pro compared to Elements. If you select a clip and press delete in Pro you'll get a regular delete which leaves the adjacent clips alone and you get a gap. If you do that in Elements, you get a ripple delete which deletes the clip and moves the subsequent clips over to close the gap. The way you switch to the other type of delete is the same in both programs. After the clip is selected, press and hold the shift key and press delete. Alternately, you can right click on the clip in the timeline. For a regular delete, select Clear. For a ripple delete, select Ripple Delete in Premiere Pro or Delete and Close Gap in Premiere Elements.