Increasing audio Waveform height without affecting volume
- KVRian
- 599 posts since 8 Apr, 2014 from USA
Hi again.
Real basic question: is there a way to change Waveform display height in the audio clips?
Thanks in advance.
G
Real basic question: is there a way to change Waveform display height in the audio clips?
Thanks in advance.
G
-
- KVRAF
- 2464 posts since 9 Oct, 2008 from UK
You can make all tracks taller, if that's what you mean. Either ctr+mouse wheel while over the tracks area, or click the + (or -) of the Z function near the lower right corner of the tracks area.
[W10-64, T5/6/7/W8/9/10/11/12/13, 32(to W8)&64 all, Spike],[W7-32, T5/6/7/W8, Gina16] everything underused.
- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 599 posts since 8 Apr, 2014 from USA
Again thank you.
No. I would like to make the Waveform height larger without having to increase the gain or normalize. there is an icon in Studio One that allows you to increase all Waveform display heights without having to change the gain...can help with editing quieter passages.
No. I would like to make the Waveform height larger without having to increase the gain or normalize. there is an icon in Studio One that allows you to increase all Waveform display heights without having to change the gain...can help with editing quieter passages.
-
- KVRist
- 473 posts since 1 Feb, 2006
no waveform zoom available in tracktion as of yet
-
- KVRAF
- 2464 posts since 9 Oct, 2008 from UK
The things I suggested don't change the audio, just the display. You can double-click a track or clip to make the track bigger for editing. Any track that's been double-clicked will stay bigger until it gets double-clicked again, but I can't see a way to do all tracks at once.
[W10-64, T5/6/7/W8/9/10/11/12/13, 32(to W8)&64 all, Spike],[W7-32, T5/6/7/W8, Gina16] everything underused.
-
- KVRist
- 473 posts since 1 Feb, 2006
i guess he asked for waveformzoom (vertically), which is not the same as making tracks bigger vertically.
in many cases low level passages stay nearly unvisible when tracks are made bigger in height.
in many cases low level passages stay nearly unvisible when tracks are made bigger in height.
-
- KVRAF
- 2464 posts since 9 Oct, 2008 from UK
I seem to be zooming in quite nicely with the scroll-wheel on my mouse. It won't zoom any further, so I assume I've reached the sample limit, and the waveform display has reached that jagged look.klangbastler wrote:no waveform zoom available in tracktion as of yet
[W10-64, T5/6/7/W8/9/10/11/12/13, 32(to W8)&64 all, Spike],[W7-32, T5/6/7/W8, Gina16] everything underused.
-
- KVRist
- 473 posts since 1 Feb, 2006
yes, that is horizontal zoom down to the sample.
waveform-zoom means, that all samples on the waveformdisplay will be pushed upwards "vertically".
loud parts may be moved outside of view (above the upper border of the clip), but lower levels are much better visible than without.
the word zoom may be misleading here, but that's what it is often called in other daws.
it is a very helpful feature, as levels between -60 and 0 db don't really fit very well in the vertical space on a track in a daw, even when track height is maximised. with it you can optimize visibility, depending on the levels you used for recording.
waveform-zoom means, that all samples on the waveformdisplay will be pushed upwards "vertically".
loud parts may be moved outside of view (above the upper border of the clip), but lower levels are much better visible than without.
the word zoom may be misleading here, but that's what it is often called in other daws.
it is a very helpful feature, as levels between -60 and 0 db don't really fit very well in the vertical space on a track in a daw, even when track height is maximised. with it you can optimize visibility, depending on the levels you used for recording.
- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 599 posts since 8 Apr, 2014 from USA
Said better than I ever could, AND spot on. Thanks.klangbastler wrote:yes, that is horizontal zoom down to the sample.
waveform-zoom means, that all samples on the waveformdisplay will be pushed upwards "vertically".
loud parts may be moved outside of view (above the upper border of the clip), but lower levels are much better visible than without.
the word zoom may be misleading here, but that's what it is often called in other daws.
it is a very helpful feature, as levels between -60 and 0 db don't really fit very well in the vertical space on a track in a daw, even when track height is maximised. with it you can optimize visibility, depending on the levels you used for recording.
-
- KVRist
- 166 posts since 9 Nov, 2005 from Portland, Oregon
I've done that by highlighting the clip, increasing the gain in the properties bar to get the waveform larger, then reducing the tracks volume control back to sane levels by inserting a volume/pan onto the track at bar one (or wherever) and adjust as needed from there.
I know it's not an exact answer, but this worked for me.
I know it's not an exact answer, but this worked for me.
Hoozda Band
-
- KVRist
- 436 posts since 26 Jul, 2012 from Prague, czech republic
As it seems ... Waveform hasnt been the ideal name for new release 
