Am I The ONLY Person Who Finds FL Studio EXCEEDINGLY HARD To Understand And Use?
-
- Banned
- 58 posts since 10 Oct, 2012 from texas
I had the fl 10 demo for a month im new to producing since june. I found it confusing and its ugly looking IMO. Fl 10 has a good piano roll, i think thats the best thing going for it.
I bought ableton 8 intro and i think its easier to understand just got to save to buy suite so i can have all the options for it. The piano roll isnt like fl but ableton is just a more comfortable program for me to use
I bought ableton 8 intro and i think its easier to understand just got to save to buy suite so i can have all the options for it. The piano roll isnt like fl but ableton is just a more comfortable program for me to use
- KVRian
- 1313 posts since 31 Dec, 2008
FL simply has it's own way of doing things. What I really like about it that it's fast and relatively lightweight on memory. And it has the fastest plugin folder scanner I've seen.
-
- Banned
- 58 posts since 10 Oct, 2012 from texas
That it does. I did enjoy being able to riff generate and edit the ones it would make for me.S0lo wrote:FL simply has it's own way of doing things. What I really like about it that it's fast and relatively lightweight on memory. And it has the fastest plugin folder scanner I've seen.
-
- KVRian
- 1238 posts since 12 Mar, 2002 from Kentucky
To me FL followed the same path as Acid. Great in the early versions. Then bloatware as it went from filling a role as an advanced drum and pattern machine to being a full blown DAW. I already had a full blown DAW and did not need FL for that.
I would love to see them re-release a VSTi version focusing on drum parts and arps like it did early on, but 64 bit and with a few advancements.
I would love to see them re-release a VSTi version focusing on drum parts and arps like it did early on, but 64 bit and with a few advancements.
All I need to be happy is one more VSTi.
- KVRAF
- 4891 posts since 3 Jan, 2003 from Vancouver
I eventually stopped expecting to; that's the main difference. At 13 you assume it's possible (even likely) and are surprised and dismayed to find out that's not the case. Much like FL's help. I no longer expect it to be able to help me with anything that I don't already know. Unless I happen to be wanting to go through the interface geographically, touching things to see what they do, no musical purpose in mind. Hmm.. also reminiscent of...Acid Mitch wrote:If you think women at age 13 are hard to understand , just wait untill they get older
Surely there must be consensus by now...
-
- KVRian
- 730 posts since 13 Apr, 2002 from Terra Australis
Spot on! I used Fruity Loops a lot in the early days to produce loops (which I then arranged in Acid). Loops is what Fruity Loops was made for, that's what it did well. Everything since then has been bolted on and feels awkward.Rabid wrote:To me FL followed the same path as Acid. Great in the early versions. Then bloatware as it went from filling a role as an advanced drum and pattern machine to being a full blown DAW. I already had a full blown DAW and did not need FL for that.
I would love to see them re-release a VSTi version focusing on drum parts and arps like it did early on, but 64 bit and with a few advancements.
I never liked the attitude of the devs much either, but in fairness they did have to deal with an inordinate share of the young teenage market.
-
- KVRAF
- 4222 posts since 23 Feb, 2004 from Tucson Arizona USA
These threads sometimes puzzle me. I realize that my workflow is pretty unusual compared to the typical user:vaisnava wrote:FL Studio is insanely weird and complicate to use outside of that initial 16 beat pattern...However, try Jeskola Buzz, I know that by heart. haha
Mixer view with three mic inputs, two for the piano, one for the flute. Arm, Press Play, Press Stop.
It bugs me a little bit that the "Step Sequencer" is really primarily the container for the VST instrumentation. Beginner tutorials could explain this a lot better. (Not every style of music begins with a 4/4 Kick-Snare thing.)
- KVRian
- 966 posts since 16 Feb, 2010
heh, yes you do tend to sympathise a bit more when you see some of the shit they have to put up with.spirit wrote: I never liked the attitude of the devs much either, but in fairness they did have to deal with an inordinate share of the young teenage market.
I'd hate to be a developer! (well I am in games development but I dont have to deal with 'the paying public'
-
- KVRAF
- 42529 posts since 21 Dec, 2005
But it's not an excuse because many people who buy the program were NOT young. And besides, if you paid for it, it deserves support. I believe it has nothing to do with "teenagers" and everything to do with a built-in tude.
Anyways, to me it's a mess. If you like it, that is good too
Anyways, to me it's a mess. If you like it, that is good too
-
experimental.crow experimental.crow https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=6258
- KVRAF
- 6895 posts since 9 Mar, 2003 from the bridge of sighs
the step sequencer is just another way to look at the piano roll ...
a sort of 'piano roll for dummies' ...
a sort of 'piano roll for dummies' ...

-
- KVRAF
- 4222 posts since 23 Feb, 2004 from Tucson Arizona USA
I always thought it was a Belgique thing. Isn't it?hibidy wrote:But it's not an excuse because many people who buy the program were NOT young. And besides, if you paid for it, it deserves support. I believe it has nothing to do with "teenagers" and everything to do with a built-in tude.
Anyways, to me it's a mess. If you like it, that is good too
- KVRian
- 1313 posts since 31 Dec, 2008
IMO, they might have attitude issues with some users, but some times I would like them for it, they are real, they talk like normal people you find on the street, not as corporate trying to sell you some thing, they don't pretend to be kind just to please you.spirit wrote:I never liked the attitude of the devs much either, but in fairness they did have to deal with an inordinate share of the young teenage market.
-
- KVRer
- 1 posts since 27 Mar, 2012 from San Diego
Carpenter wrote:OH...MY...GOD...
So...much clicking! So many sub menus! Thanks guys, but I give up on FL again! I tried to use the F1 manual, but that thing reads like...well...a manual. My eyes were seeing the words, but it was all Charlie Browns teacher in my head. I don't believe any dose of Adderall big enough to get me through page one would be safe for my body.
I know myself and I...won't bother with any program where I can't start to figure out and understand how to do rudimentary things by just playing with it for ten minutes and that's just not happening with me and FL. I keep getting the same midi clip over and over. I was proud that I got one midi clip with some data in it on track 1. Nothing that makes sense to me will let me put another blank clip on the remaining tracks. It just keeps making copies of the first clip and my windows keep popping away, sending me back to sub-menu hunting...vomit. There should at least be a thumb tack icon on the piano roll, step sequencer, etc. to keep them showing on the desktop when you click off of them. I looked and looked and saw no thumb tack icon. It doesn't seem to auto route? It doesn't seem to let me just click and drag a synth to a track and boom, channel routed, blank midi clip ready to draw in?
Well, whatever. I'm just going to buy some of the Image Line stuff I really like as plugins and use them in Studio One.
It was a good effort though everyone! Thanks again!
You just need to learn keyboard shortcuts man. There are more FL tutorials online than any other DAW. No excuse for not being able to figure it out. Just takes effort and practice like ANYTHING else.
Sticking feathers up your ass doesn't make you a chicken.
-
- KVRian
- 1336 posts since 21 Dec, 2004
I was a fruity loops user years ago because pattern based sequencing/song building was familiar after working with groovebox sequencers. I also used Acid Pro to arrange linear based song composition. As soon as I tried the hybrid approach Ableton uses, I switched. That one took me awhile to wrap my head around too. I have tried many demos of standard Linear DAWs, but decided sticking with one and learning it was much better than poking around in many. If I ever try something easier to use or more geared towards live play, I might switch, but it would take a lot to make me want to relearn everything.
FL full blown suite is very feature rich. If you own it and like a few parts of it, hunker down and read through the manuals and just concentrate on getting good with one DAW to start with.
FL full blown suite is very feature rich. If you own it and like a few parts of it, hunker down and read through the manuals and just concentrate on getting good with one DAW to start with.
"I am a meat popsicle"
Soundcloud Vondragonnoggin
Soundclick Wormhelmet
Soundcloud Vondragonnoggin
Soundclick Wormhelmet
- KVRAF
- 5564 posts since 13 Jan, 2005 from the bottom of my heart
i use cubase but i use fl studio as VST because it's a great DAW. Very easy and fast. If one day the support for hardware gear arrive pro-quality i think i switch full from cubase to fl studio.
people who think that fl is not a full DAW are biased. on youtube you can find tracks made with fl that blow you away. pro standard 1000%.
people who think that fl is not a full DAW are biased. on youtube you can find tracks made with fl that blow you away. pro standard 1000%.
Whoever wants music instead of noise, joy instead of pleasure, soul instead of gold, creative work instead of business, passion instead of foolery, finds no home in this trivial world of ours.