User Manual

Table Of Contents
WAVELAB
Editing in the Wave window 6 – 87
Clicking on the status bar
If you click on the cursor position on the status bar, the view is scrolled so
that the wave cursor becomes visible.
If you right-click instead, a dialog appears to let you specify a certain time
position to scroll the view to.
Using a wheel mouse
If you move the wheel down the scroll bar will move forward and vice
versa. You can also hold down the wheel and drag the view in either
horizontal direction.
Snapshots
Snapshots store the Main view’s “layout” – essentially two things:
How a window is scrolled (which part of the wave you see).
The window’s zoom factor.
If you move back and forth between various positions in a file, or if you
zoom in and out for detailed or overview editing, using snapshots will save
you a lot of time. Snapshots are created and managed on the Wave
Snapshots control bar, opened from the View menu.
To create a snapshot, you first set up the view as desired (by scrolling
and/or zooming). Then click the camera icon on the Wave Snapshots
control bar, followed by one of the numbers. The snapshot is now stored
under that button. The fact that the snapshot is used is indicated by a red
circle around the number.
You use the same procedure to “reprogram” existing snapshots.
To recall a stored snapshot, simply click on its number on the Wave
Snapshots control bar.
Snapshots will be automatically saved with the individual file if “Save view
settings in companion file” is activated in the Preferences–Wave edit tab,
see “Saving view settings on page 124.
This snapshot is “programmed”.