Would you care to explain, Stale Bread?dr.wackler wrote:stale bread wrote:cntrL+1
cntrl+2![]()
MIDI editing in Live 4?
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- KVRian
- 980 posts since 25 Feb, 2003
- KVRAF
- 2874 posts since 22 Oct, 2002 from "somewhere between digital and analog"
...they won't put a 2 button mouse on a Mac at a dealer either... As the Mac guy said to me at Comp USA... "it's an aesthetic thing"...DOH!
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- KVRAF
- 4878 posts since 13 Jun, 2002 from Montreal
OK I just had look at a G5 and though it is an impressive bit of engineering, I still find the MAC OS a huge turn off. So I don't think I would ever bring myself to spend money on a Mac. Especially just to run applications that run as well if not better (at least for me) on a PC.
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- KVRist
- 301 posts since 30 Aug, 2002
Run linux on it thenBeardedone wrote:OK I just had look at a G5 and though it is an impressive bit of engineering, I still find the MAC OS a huge turn off. So I don't think I would ever bring myself to spend money on a Mac. Especially just to run applications that run as well if not better (at least for me) on a PC.
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- KVRAF
- 4878 posts since 13 Jun, 2002 from Montreal
Now you are really scaring me!Beardedone wrote:
OK I just had look at a G5 and though it is an impressive bit of engineering, I still find the MAC OS a huge turn off. So I don't think I would ever bring myself to spend money on a Mac. Especially just to run applications that run as well if not better (at least for me) on a PC.
Run linux on it then Expensive computer and free OS.
See ya!
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- KVRAF
- 2875 posts since 28 Jan, 2004 from Da Nang, Vietnam
Cubase works this way too. It's handy if you decide later that an earlier quantization wasn't what you wanted. In Live you have to undo every other change you've made since the quantization. This isn't a total showstopper for me but it is a hassle.dr.wackler wrote:In Logic you can always return to the original unquantized version of your sequence. You can also jump between quantisation values as you like, Logic always does it based on the original unquantized version, not on the previous quantisation (e.g. in Ableton Live it wouldn't make any sense to quantize by 1/16th if previously you quantized by 1/8th).stale bread wrote:I undo quantization all the time, don't know why you say its destructive,
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- KVRist
- 171 posts since 3 Feb, 2003
Huh? Comp USA is known for not having a clue when it comes to Macs. Every Mac store I've ever been in (including every Apple Store) has tons of multi-button mice available for sale. You can even buy them on Apple's online store too.DHR53 wrote:...they won't put a 2 button mouse on a Mac at a dealer either... As the Mac guy said to me at Comp USA... "it's an aesthetic thing"...DOH!
- KVRAF
- 2874 posts since 22 Oct, 2002 from "somewhere between digital and analog"
He's a certified "Apple technician"... so tell him that! and furthermore, they were the only certified Apple retailers before the new Apple store... You can buy em' but Apple won't make one!
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 358 posts since 2 Dec, 2002
Follow up report:
I did some more testing and found out that you can't offset a clip by anything less than a 16th note! To make things groovy - a few ticks is what you need. Am I overlooking something obvious here? It's a major feature missing otherwise. A real show stopper!
I did some more testing and found out that you can't offset a clip by anything less than a 16th note! To make things groovy - a few ticks is what you need. Am I overlooking something obvious here? It's a major feature missing otherwise. A real show stopper!
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- KVRian
- 980 posts since 25 Feb, 2003
Think different: Move the notes inside the clip instead.ZooTooK wrote:I did some more testing and found out that you can't offset a clip by anything less than a 16th note!
It's easy: Select all and hold Ctrl(PC) or Cmd(Mac) while moving them.
With all further editing they will snap both to the grid and to their relative subposition, and you can move them to minus positions (i.e. to before the clip start) as well if you need to.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 358 posts since 2 Dec, 2002
Thanks for the reply. It works fine for MIDI clips - how about audio? I can't work out how to nudge them... OK should RTFM.dr.wackler wrote: It's easy: Select all and hold Ctrl(PC) or Cmd(Mac) while moving them.
With all further editing they will snap both to the grid and to their relative subposition, and you can move them to minus positions (i.e. to before the clip start) as well if you need to.
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- KVRAF
- 1972 posts since 18 Apr, 2004
sorry doc, i mistook you for talking about the grid zoom, you just meant viewing though.
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- KVRian
- 980 posts since 25 Feb, 2003
You can move the whole grid of warped clips by grabbing and moving the position 1 marker.ZooTooK wrote:Thanks for the reply. It works fine for MIDI clips - how about audio? I can't work out how to nudge them... OK should RTFM.
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- KVRian
- 980 posts since 25 Feb, 2003
Ahh, alright.stale bread wrote:sorry doc, i mistook you for talking about the grid zoom, you just meant viewing though.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 358 posts since 2 Dec, 2002
cheersdr.wackler wrote:You can move the whole grid of warped clips by grabbing and moving the position 1 marker.ZooTooK wrote:Thanks for the reply. It works fine for MIDI clips - how about audio? I can't work out how to nudge them... OK should RTFM.
