Hello,
In the Groove Doctor tutorial video, it shows the user zoomed way in jumping from one transient marker to the next as he fine tunes their positions. Is there a command/keyboard shortcut to scroll in that way, or was that just the magic of editing? I've been using Tracktion since about T5 if I remember correctly, and I am still adapting to unfamiliar navigation controls. Partly my fault for not just digging in and memorizing the idioms, but also due to my rather infantile insistence that it should come naturally with little or no effort.
Navigation (Scrolling) Question About Groove Doctor
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- KVRist
- 42 posts since 22 Nov, 2014
[Waveform 12.0.53 on Mac Monterey 12.3.1]
Art is dangerous. It is one of the attractions: when it ceases to be dangerous, you don't want it. - Duke Ellington
Art is dangerous. It is one of the attractions: when it ceases to be dangerous, you don't want it. - Duke Ellington
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- KVRian
- 524 posts since 16 Mar, 2017
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 42 posts since 22 Nov, 2014
Thank you fde101, but I wasn't asking for a list of all short-cuts. Waveform helpfully provides a categorized list right in the settings. Furthermore the list you provided does not include a shortcut to the appropriate command since it is unassigned by default.
For anyone else curious, I did finally answer my own question. Yes there is a command called "Scroll to next transient" to navigate as was demonstrated in the video. As of now, it is unassigned by default and listed along with its partner "Scroll to previous transient" at the bottom of the list of navigation shortcuts in the settings. I've assigned the pair of commands to [option + ,] and [option + .], which seems to work well for me.
I haven't gone deep on the Groove Doctor yet, but I'm excited to be able to extract a tempo map from an existing track to get away from mechanistic quantization of parts generated via step clip or other non-performance-related methods.
For anyone else curious, I did finally answer my own question. Yes there is a command called "Scroll to next transient" to navigate as was demonstrated in the video. As of now, it is unassigned by default and listed along with its partner "Scroll to previous transient" at the bottom of the list of navigation shortcuts in the settings. I've assigned the pair of commands to [option + ,] and [option + .], which seems to work well for me.
I haven't gone deep on the Groove Doctor yet, but I'm excited to be able to extract a tempo map from an existing track to get away from mechanistic quantization of parts generated via step clip or other non-performance-related methods.
[Waveform 12.0.53 on Mac Monterey 12.3.1]
Art is dangerous. It is one of the attractions: when it ceases to be dangerous, you don't want it. - Duke Ellington
Art is dangerous. It is one of the attractions: when it ceases to be dangerous, you don't want it. - Duke Ellington
