User manual

Table Of Contents
57
Working with projects
Opening projects
Opening projects
The “Open…” command on the File menu is used for opening saved project files.
If you open a project saved with a different program version that contains data for
functions not available in your version, this data may be lost when saving the project
with your version.
Several projects can be open at the same time.
This is useful if you want to copy parts or entire sections from one project to
another.
If there is already an open project, you will be asked if you want to activate the new
project.
Click No to open the project inactive.
This significantly reduces load times, especially for large projects.
Click Activate to open and activate the new project.
The active project is indicated by the lit Activate Project button in the upper left
corner of the Project window. To activate a different project, simply click its
Activate Project button.
You can also open project files by selecting an entry from the “Recent Projects”
submenu of the File menu.
This submenu lists the projects you have recently worked with, with the most
recent at the top of the list. When you create new projects, the Recent category in
the Projects section of Steinberg Hub also displays a list of the recently opened
projects. For further information, see
“Creating new projects” on page 55.
You can drag projects from the MediaBay into the Cubase application window
(not into an existing Project window) to open them.
About the “Missing Ports” dialog
If you open a Cubase project created on a different system (other audio hardware),
the program tries to find matching audio inputs and outputs for the i/o busses (this is
one of the reasons why you should use descriptive, generic names for your input and
output ports – see
“Preparations” on page 28).
If the program cannot resolve all audio/MIDI inputs and outputs used in the project, a
Missing Ports dialog will open. This allows you to manually re-route any ports
specified in the project to ports available in your system.
Closing projects
The Close command on the File menu closes the active window. If a Project window
is active, selecting this closes the corresponding project.
If the project contains unsaved changes, you are asked whether you want to save
it before closing.
If you select “Don’t Save” and have recorded or created new audio files since
saving, you will be asked if you want to delete or keep these.