From: Dan <ge...@co...> - 2004-07-25 19:30:11
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Excellent, yes this does exactly what i'm after...I've closed the feature request. Thanks for your help, Dan On Sunday 25 July 2004 20:03, Silvan wrote: > On Sunday 25 July 2004 02:36 pm, Dan wrote: > > > > The subject covers my question. I can't see anyway of doing this, am > > > > i missing something obvious? maybe it's just me but i think it would > > > > be a very useful feature. > > > > > > I guess you could create a velocity ruler and slide the velocity down > > > to 0. Well... You can't currently slide it down to 0. I'm looking > > > into that. But you can slide it down to 1. > > > > Ok, thanks, but the trouble is when working with a complex song or with > > chords, i'd lose more than just a single note, i really need the ability > > to be more selective, so i'll add it as a feature request...if it hasn't > > already been suggested. > > It's rather fiddly, I think, but you can already adjust the velocity of > every note that has a velocity property. (Some notes don't, depending on > how they were created; in which case you'd need to select them and Adjust > -> Velocity -> Set Event Velocities for these notes to give them adjustable > velocity properties.) > > Given a chord with a bunch of quarter notes at exactly the same time, click > on one of them (the one that happens to be on top of the stack at this > particular point in time) in the velocity ruler, then the [ and ] keys let > you flip through until you get to the note you're after. Fiddly, but it > works. You can see the color change on the matrix grid so you can tell > which note you've twiddled. What you're trying to accomplish should > already be possible without having to wait for someone to have time to look > at your feature request. |