User manual

Table Of Contents
The second column controls the rst parameter of the MIDI event. For note events, this
indicates the pitch. For control changes, this indicates the control change number. For
program changes, this indicates the program number.
The third column controls the second parameter of the MIDI event. For note events, this
indicates the velocity. For control changes, this indicates the amount of control change
within the range 0 to 127. Program changes do not have a second parameter.
The action bar at the bottom of the subsection contains the following options:
Add Control Change Action: Adds a control change action with default settings.
Add Program Change Action: Adds a program change action with default settings.
Add Note Event Action: Adds a key switch action with default settings.
Add Absolute Channel Change Action: Adds an absolute channel change action with
default settings.
Add Relative Channel Change Action: Adds a relative channel change action with
default settings.
Duplicate Action: Creates a copy of an existing action that you can then edit separately
from the original.
Delete Action: Deletes the selected action.
NOTE
You can only select one action at a time in the Actions table.
The Actions subsection also allows you to specify which actions affect the start of notes and
which affect the end of notes. For example, you might want an event that resets the playback
playing technique back to normal to apply only to the end of notes.
On events affects the start of notes.
Off events affects the end of notes.
You can also use Middle C (note 60) to choose the pitch for middle C, as there are different
conventions for this. We recommend that you consult the documentation for your sound
libraries to check whether each one considers middle C to be C3, C4, or C5, and change this
setting accordingly.
9
Mutual Exclusion Groups section
Allows you to specify playback playing techniques that are mutually exclusive, that is, cannot
be in use concurrently. For example, players cannot play vibrato and non-vibrato at the same
time. Putting playback playing techniques into the same exclusion group means only one
can be used at a time.
Mutual exclusion groups apply only to the selected expression map. This allows you to set
different mutual exclusion groups in each expression map, for example, if one of your sound
libraries supports a particular playback playing technique combination for an instrument but
another sound library does not.
The Mutual Exclusion Groups column allows you to add and delete mutual exclusion
groups. The action bar at the bottom of the column contains the following options:
Play mode
Expression maps
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Dorico SE 3.1.10