Reference Guide

597
Editing transient markers
AudioSnap (Producer and Studio only)
Editing transient markers
Transient markers show where the transients of a clip are (areas where the level increases
suddenly), and are used to edit the timing of audio clips.
AudioSnap finds transients automatically, but the transient markers don’t always appear exactly
where you might want them for the kind of editing you want to do.
Most AudioSnap commands edit transient markers automatically as a result of an editing operation,
but sometimes you achieve the best results by editing the markers manually.
You can edit the markers by moving them to new locations, adding markers, filtering out markers,
deleting markers, and promoting markers (protecting them from being filtered).
Figure 199. Transient markers
See:
“To select a transient marker” on page 598
“To select multiple adjacent transient markers” on page 598
“To select multiple discontiguous transient markers” on page 598
“To select the same transient in multiple clips” on page 598
“To extend a multi-track marker selection” on page 599
“To select all similar transient markers in a clip” on page 599
“To move a transient marker (without stretching audio)” on page 600
“To drag a transient marker and stretch audio” on page 600
“To stretch multiple transient markers in a clip” on page 600
“To stretch multiple transient markers in a clip proportionally” on page 600
“To reset transient markers” on page 601
“To disable a transient marker” on page 601
“To delete a transient marker” on page 601
“To insert a new transient marker” on page 601
“To copy transient markers from one track to another track” on page 602
“To enable/disable transient markers” on page 602
“To navigate to the next/previous transient (TAB to transients)” on page 603