Operation Manual

Edit In An External Editor
The software will work in conjunction with an external sound editor in order to apply permanent changes or edits to the
sound. For example, if you want to reverse a sound or edit out clicks and pop or some other audio editing, you may
want to use an external editor. (This requires that you own or have downloaded a sound editor.)
Configure An External Sound Editor
Go to the preferences and choose the General tab to select an external sound editor to use.
How To Edit A Sound In An External Editor
Right click on a sound and choose Edit In External Editor or choose Edit In External Editor from the Sound menu.
You will have the option of editing the original sound or a copy. If you edit the original sound, the change will be a
permanent and will not be undo-able.
Setting the Snap Point
The snap point is the position in the sound that is snapped or aligned. The snap point defaults to the start of the
sound. The snap point only matters if you have snap on.
When a sound is analyzed for beats, the snap point will be positioned at the first detected beat. You can adjust the
snap point's offset in the Loop Editor.
Virtual Instrument Clips
A Virtual Instrument Clip is made up of MIDI data and instructs a synthesizer what to play. Virtual instrument clips do
not contain the actual audio data and can be edited in more detail.
Each line inside the clip represents a note.
Adding...
Recording
Editing
Moving Sounds
Trimming Sounds
Looping Sounds
Splitting Sounds
Removing Spaces Between Clips
Deleting Sounds
Copy And Paste
Merge Clips
Adjusting Volume
Adjusting Pan
Editing Low And High Pass Filters
Time Stretching Sounds (FlexAudioâ„¢)
Adjusting Tempo
Pitch Shifting Sounds
Adjusting Key
Renaming A Sound
Locking Sounds
Muting Sounds
Adding Effects To Sounds
Sound Details And Properties
Printing Notation