I think it's a similar situation to me and Live, I bought it back when it was audio only, was the only truly easy audio looping software and rewired into DP, Logic etc. easily, making it not unlike using a plugin really. At one point I knew Live as well as I know DP, but that was almost a decade ago now. Live isn't that complicated if you don't go into Max 4 Live though, and I don't really. In terms of knowing 100% it's definitely DP. To your own point though, you really don't need to know too much about any DAW to get work done, if you can setup a MIDI controller, understand the MIDI editor, basics of audio editing and VI's what else do you need? Knowing where in DP you go to change the track numbers along the top from measures to time or both and SMPTE is great I guess? but unless you change the setting accidentally, it's probably fine the way it is for you.BONES wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 10:03 pmI don't get that at all. If you're flicking between different DAWs, you're never going to be fluent with any of them. I think you need to pick and stick and get as good as you can get with one application. Any perceived strengths and weaknesses are going to be subtle, at best, and being a guru with the one you choose is going to be far more beneficial overall. If I encountered unworkable issues with Studio One, I'd be looking for something else to use permanently, not just for the things Studio One gave me problems with (and I definitely wouldn't be looking at Reaper).machinesworking wrote: Thu Jan 08, 2026 8:44 amTo be fair to Reaper a buddy of mine loves both Studio One and Reaper, and uses Reaper most of the time because for things like film scoring Studio One can get wonky.
In my friends case he's severely dyslexic so he chooses a DAW based on how many youtube videos there are for it otherwise he would never learn it. When Studio One caused issues for him he dove into Reaper.
I don't know if Studio One has a Run Command or similar named search function? but I find that was super helpful in Bitwig and DP to learn the basics since there's no real naming convention for parts of DAWs, that's the only hard part of DAW switching, but in the bigger picture you're correct, best to pick your poisen and be done with it.