Indeed. And it should be useful for both developers and (potential) users to know what is working, what isn't and what is lacking. Emotional investment makes little sense here: We all want to work with tools that function as we expect and enjoy the experience. That's why I'm happy with Reaper - as it means I can stop flitting between Pro Tools and FL Studio for different tasks in the same project.EvilDragon wrote: Tue Mar 09, 2021 8:31 amThat doesn't mean I don't understand workflow or know what works better for me personally, or what I need in a piano roll personally.expecto wrote: Tue Mar 09, 2021 3:05 am EvilDragon admitted he barely even makes music so take some of his views like the ones in here with a grain of salt.
Also, stating factually what FL is missing is not "hating on it", it's just stating an easily verifiable fact. With FL, I go back to version 7, I'm not hating on it. We just drifted apart because things I use more often are not supported in an easy way in FL. Just try some multitrack audio recording or vocal comping in FL if you want to shoot yourself in the head. It's a different paradigm, it's not made for easy and fast linear multitrack workflow, it's on the other hand very much made for non-linear pattern-based workflow. That's its forte.
Yeah. Definitely will spend some more time setting up the piano roll in Reaper - everything that I use regularly was easy enough to customise but I only took a brief look at the piano roll for reasons similar to those given by EvilDragon - I'm mostly working with audio without need for MIDI beyond tracking controllers - which is another area that FL Studio is sadly lacking - especially for mixing tasks.MuzikFreq wrote: Mon Mar 08, 2021 9:09 pmEasily,Unaspected wrote: Mon Mar 08, 2021 1:21 pm It would be difficult to find a better piano roll. FL Studio's is pretty much the standard to copy.
Bitwig, Live 11, Reaper, Reason, Studio One
But once you get used to click dragging for note length and position.... It's a huge time saver, also being able to route midi vsts like cthulhu and record the midi data from it is also a really nice feature.
It's all horses for courses though - especially as we all work in different ways on various aspects of audio production; possessing different needs and expectations.
Maybe FL Studio is more camels for courses though.