Reference Guide

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General editing
AudioSnap
3. Press CTRL+V to paste the data.
A new MIDI clip is inserted in the track
To save the extracted MIDI timing as a Groove Quantize file
1. Press SHIFT+A to open the AudioSnap palette.
2. Click the Save as Groove button .
The Define Groove dialog appears.
3. In the File field, choose a file to save the pattern in, or type a name to create a new file.
4. In the Pattern field, type a name for the pattern, and click OK.
The extracted MIDI groove is saved as a Groove Quantize file, and can be used at any time with
the Groove Quantize command.
See:
Using the Transient tool
Editing transient markers
Using the AudioSnap palette
Synchronizing audio and the project tempo
Fixing timing problems in audio clips
Extracting MIDI timing information from audio
General editing
Using the Pool
Algorithms and rendering
Keyboard shortcuts
General editing
If you want to snap edits in the Clips pane to transient markers, see Snapping edits to audio beats.
If you want to split each beat into a separate clip, see Splitting beats into clips.
Note: All the new MIDI notes have the same pitch, and the tails of the preceding notes reach
all the way to the following notes, so you can’t see the actual rhythm. You can easily shorten the
duration of each note event in order to clearly see each note event. To do so, click Process >
Length to open the Length dialog. In the Length dialog, disable the Start Times check box,
enable the Duration check box, and type 50 in the Percent field. Click OK to close the dialog.
Then click the PRV Mode button in the MIDI track (you can see the rhythm if you enable the
Inline Piano Roll view and zoom in).