How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
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Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
Thank you again to all,
Lavomatic
Lavomatic
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kozikowski
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Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
Drag-select some portion of the blue waves. Command-E Zoom into it. Command-3 zoom out a little bit and Command-F zoom out to the full song. Command-E's official name is Zoom Into Selection. If you don't select anything, it doesn't work.
For example, if you want to accurately snip off the noisy end of a song, Command-F Zoom out full, drag-select the end of the song over on the right and zoom into it with Command-E. Spacebar play it to make sure you know where everything is and then drag-select the portion you want to delete. Press Delete.
Command-F back to the full song.
You may want to get a lot more accurate than that with more zoom-ins if you need it, but you did the whole surgery with two of the three three command keys plus the Delete key. If you decide you're going to do this for nine hours a day for a living, then you can get good with the other navigation keys, but I do almost everything in those keys.
I would suggest strongly you de-select Preferences > Tracks > [_] Update Display. If you don't, the blue waves may slide out from underneath you if the cursor goes to the end of the screen -- hiding your edit points.
Koz
For example, if you want to accurately snip off the noisy end of a song, Command-F Zoom out full, drag-select the end of the song over on the right and zoom into it with Command-E. Spacebar play it to make sure you know where everything is and then drag-select the portion you want to delete. Press Delete.
Command-F back to the full song.
You may want to get a lot more accurate than that with more zoom-ins if you need it, but you did the whole surgery with two of the three three command keys plus the Delete key. If you decide you're going to do this for nine hours a day for a living, then you can get good with the other navigation keys, but I do almost everything in those keys.
I would suggest strongly you de-select Preferences > Tracks > [_] Update Display. If you don't, the blue waves may slide out from underneath you if the cursor goes to the end of the screen -- hiding your edit points.
Koz
Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
Thanks again to Koz.
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Gale Andrews
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Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
It's still not ideal in a long track, because you are not going to be able to select accurately enough when zoomed out to fit the track in the window.kozikowski wrote:Drag-select some portion of the blue waves. Command-E Zoom into it. Command-3 zoom out a little bit and Command-F zoom out to the full song. Command-E's official name is Zoom Into Selection. If you don't select anything, it doesn't work.
But if you use this and want to work on both ends of the zoomed in selection, another useful pair of commands is View > Go to Selection Start (CTRL + [ ) and Go to Selection End (CTRL + ] ). This places the start or end of the selection respectively in the centre of the screen.
Gale
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Gale Andrews
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Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
Do you want to vote for dynamically modifying the selection while loop playing? As it is now, if you loop play a selection then modify the selection, loop play carries on playing the old selection.Robert J. H. wrote:Sounds not very accessible to my ears.Gale Andrews wrote:Yes, so @lavomatic - if you want to add a "vote" for scrubbing, let us know. There is a simpler "scrubbing" that just lets you drag the playhead and does not produce sound until you release the drag. Perhaps that is easier for us to implement.kozikowski wrote:Which is a long way of saying Audacity doesn't scrub. You can't just grab the playhead and push it around to make the audio speed up or slow down and get to an edit point. It's a Very Frequently Requested Feature.
In my opinion, , the normal behaviour of such such a function would be to continuously play a short segment and a mouse movement or wheel turning would shift the cursor position.
The faster you press the key, the play speed is higher now, so I'm not sure if we need this complexity. There would still need to be an option to keep the step length the same.Robert J. H. wrote:Alternatively, the current keys (. and ,) could act more dynamically.
The faster you press the keys in succession, the farther the cursor moves, ie. the step is larger and the play speed higher.
Gale
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Robert J. H.
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Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
gayle,
A dynamical selection adaption would be great, I've always missed this feature.
It should be a kind of intelligent too in order to function efficiently. For instance, a short part (0.1 s) of the selection start or end would be played twice or trice when the boundary is move in either direction. After that, the loop play would go on as usual.
Without such a feature, adjusting long selections won't benefit from this improvement.
Furthermore, the key combinations Shift/Ctrl-Shift+Arrow had to be enabled for loop playback. I think that the different behaviours for the (Shift +) Arrow keys are unlucky chosen.
We should sharply differentiate between seek functionality (as with comma and period during play mode) and cursor or selection start/stop adjustment (as with the modifiers + arrow keys during stop mode). We have currently an unholy mixture.
A proper separation would us enable to expand the selection on the fly. Currently, only shrinking is possible because the play back does not go over the current boundaries (only with the "Set/Extend Selection" keys though).
I wonder if some of the described features could be emulated with an autohotkey script or a similar program.
A dynamical selection adaption would be great, I've always missed this feature.
It should be a kind of intelligent too in order to function efficiently. For instance, a short part (0.1 s) of the selection start or end would be played twice or trice when the boundary is move in either direction. After that, the loop play would go on as usual.
Without such a feature, adjusting long selections won't benefit from this improvement.
Furthermore, the key combinations Shift/Ctrl-Shift+Arrow had to be enabled for loop playback. I think that the different behaviours for the (Shift +) Arrow keys are unlucky chosen.
We should sharply differentiate between seek functionality (as with comma and period during play mode) and cursor or selection start/stop adjustment (as with the modifiers + arrow keys during stop mode). We have currently an unholy mixture.
A proper separation would us enable to expand the selection on the fly. Currently, only shrinking is possible because the play back does not go over the current boundaries (only with the "Set/Extend Selection" keys though).
I wonder if some of the described features could be emulated with an autohotkey script or a similar program.
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kozikowski
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Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
Or we could design Scrubbing just like every video editor on earth, every mechanical editor and some digital sound editors.
Koz
Which brings up Edit Points which we're also missing. In the event you can't zoom in and out far enough at the same time (the selection is too big) I've been known to use labels at the IN and OUT points and fake it that way. The labels become sticky when zoomed out. If you're a fumble-fingered doofus (certainly nobody I know) leave some of the work behind (make a sloppy edit) intentionally and zoom in tight for a surgical strike in a second edit. You will critically inspect each edit anyway before moving on. Nowhere is it written you have to do everything in one pass.But if you use this and want to work on both ends of the zoomed in selection, another useful pair of commands is View > Go to Selection Start (CTRL + [ ) and Go to Selection End (CTRL + ] ). This places the start or end of the selection respectively in the centre of the screen.
Koz
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Gale Andrews
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Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
Thanks, Robert. I've noted your vote and comment. Yes you cannot expand a selection while playing because it instead does long seeks. Perhaps we would only use SHIFT + period/dot and SHIFT and comma for long seeks, and not SHIFT and LEFT/RIGHT.Robert J. H. wrote:A dynamical selection adaption would be great, I've always missed this feature.
It should be a kind of intelligent too in order to function efficiently. For instance, a short part (0.1 s) of the selection start or end would be played twice or trice when the boundary is move in either direction. After that, the loop play would go on as usual.
Without such a feature, adjusting long selections won't benefit from this improvement.
Furthermore, the key combinations Shift/Ctrl-Shift+Arrow had to be enabled for loop playback. I think that the different behaviours for the (Shift +) Arrow keys are unlucky chosen.
We should sharply differentiate between seek functionality (as with comma and period during play mode) and cursor or selection start/stop adjustment (as with the modifiers + arrow keys during stop mode). We have currently an unholy mixture.
A proper separation would us enable to expand the selection on the fly. Currently, only shrinking is possible because the play back does not go over the current boundaries
Gale
________________________________________FOR INSTANT HELP: (Click on Link below)
* * * * * Tips * * * * * Tutorials * * * * * Quick Start Guide * * * * * Audacity Manual
* * * * * Tips * * * * * Tutorials * * * * * Quick Start Guide * * * * * Audacity Manual
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Gale Andrews
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Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
Please describe this. Is it markers in the waveform, not in a separate label track?kozikowski wrote:Which brings up Edit Points which we're also missing.But if you use this and want to work on both ends of the zoomed in selection, another useful pair of commands is View > Go to Selection Start (CTRL + [ ) and Go to Selection End (CTRL + ] ). This places the start or end of the selection respectively in the centre of the screen.
Gale
________________________________________FOR INSTANT HELP: (Click on Link below)
* * * * * Tips * * * * * Tutorials * * * * * Quick Start Guide * * * * * Audacity Manual
* * * * * Tips * * * * * Tutorials * * * * * Quick Start Guide * * * * * Audacity Manual
Re: How to use transport toolbar (advance/return) ?
I found this thread by searching for "scrubbing" and apologise if this isn't the most suitable place to make a humble request for including scrubbing. Especially (but not exclusively because) as a blind user, scrubbing is an extremely valuable feature. Ideally scrub speed could be varied from very slow to quite fast. Slow is good for getting an edit point, while fast is good for finding gaps, changes in the audio etc. The short and long seek facilities are useful, but scrubbing would be a great addition.
Andrew
Andrew