User Manual

Table Of Contents
WAVELAB
The Audio Montage 19 – 545
In this example, we’ve opened the file “Header1.rtf”.
As you can see, this is the personal information that was shown under the
logo in the preview CD report template. The entries are written exactly as
in the “Edit Variables” dialog; a title followed by a variable name enclosed
with “%” characters.
All text in the RTF documents apart from the code inside the percentage
marks will be shown in the report.
This lets you change headings, orders and similar; you may for example
want to use another term than “Engineer”, exclude the address or phone
number fields, etc. You can also change the fonts, styles and justification
for the text.
Also, if you have added a new user variable in the Edit Variables dialog, or
defined a variable that is not called upon in the RTF file, this variable has
to be written into the RTF file (enclosed by % signs).
However, while it is perfectly possible to enter the actual information (e.g.
the name of the project) directly in the RTF file and remove the correspond-
ing variable, this would require that you edited the RTF files each time you
created a new Audio CD report. It is much better to set up the styling of
your Audio CD report and its RTF files once and for all, and then only edit
the variables and CD Text when you work with a new project. In short:
The RTF documents should be used for adjusting the appearance of the
report, not for writing in variable values.