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Flux for mac map popup6/6/2023 The mini map always displays the whole document. During recording these bars display the current input audio level and during playback the output level is shown. To the right and left of the transport area are VU bars. (The cursor snaps then to the vertical grid lines in the wave view). Pressing the play button will start playback and with the prev/next buttons you can move the cursor around. Pressing the red circle ‘record’ button will start audio recording. These are standard transport buttons you know from iTunes and co. The blue marker is the looping start point while the red one is the end point at which playback will stop and jump back to the position indicated by the blue marker. You can drag them around by their handles (the upper area). ![]() These two elements represent locations for looped playback. So if you place the cursor at 05:00 minutes and generate 10 seconds of silence those 10 seconds silence will be inserted at 05:00. always are applied to the cursor’s location. (This is disabled during recording for obvious reasons.) If you want to change the cursor position without deselecting the current selection hold down the alt/option key when you click in the wave view or drag the cursor by its header. You can move the cursor by left-clicking anywhere in the wave view. The Cursor indicates the current playback/recording position within the document. In the screenshot above you can see that the cursor (3) is located at ~03:00 minutes. The numbers correspond to time code locations in the edited document. Selecting works as expected: Hold down the left mouse button and drag the mouse around. To scroll with a touchpad just two-finger scroll to the left/right. If your Mac has a touchpad you can zoom by using the two finder scroll gesture or by using the pinch zoom gesture. You can use your mouse’s scroll wheel to zoom in and out (by scrolling up/down) or to scroll through the document by holding shift and scrolling up/down. Double clicking will select the currently visible portion of the document. Single-clicking on the Wave View will set the cursor position to the clicked location and deselect all active selections. The vertical lines represent a time grid which adjusts itself to the current zoom level. From one line to the next the perceived sound loudness doubles for human ears. The horizontal grid lines represent the volume on a logarithmic scale. Behind the wave form you can see the grid. The higher the spike the louder the sound is. This simply is a representation of the signal’s volume at a given time. Vector renders an audio signal’s graphical representation in this view. This is where most of the action happens. We hope you will be delighted using Vector 3! The Basics The Editing Window We have also significantly improved rendering speed on Retina Macs making Vector 3 the audio editor with the smoothest UI experience on the Mac today. Vector 3 now supports 3rd party Audio Unit plugins, multi selection, adjustable loop points, adjustable selections and markers, a low power recording mode to save battery life and a transparent temporary workspace system which doesn’t prompt you anymore to create a new document every time you want to edit an existing audio file. Version 3 has been completely re-worked from the ground up and has received many much requested features and bugfixes. Vector 3 is the newest and latest version of the highly popular Vector audio editor for macOS. I have read the manual and still need help!.What’s the difference between Save As and Export?.How do I correctly set the sample rate?. ![]()
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