10.6

Table Of Contents
486Logic Pro User Guide
Change the length of new steps
In Logic Pro, drag the Length parameter values vertically to change the length of events
(this primarily applies to note events) to be added, measured in divisions (the left
number), and ticks (the right number).
You should avoid the use of small tick values because many MIDI devices do not
respond quickly enough when note on/note off messages are sent in quick succession,
resulting in no note being heard.
Set the MIDI channel number for a lane
1. In Logic Pro, select the MIDI channel checkbox.
If selected, the display is restricted to events on the set channel.
If unselected, the Channel parameter is ignored, and matching events on all channels
are displayed.
2. Choose a MIDI channel number from the pop-up menu to the right of the Channel
parameter.
Simultaneously change the parameters of multiple lanes
Just as you can adjust the parameters for several MIDI regions at once, you can set the
parameters of several lanes simultaneously.
In Logic Pro, do one of the following:
Press and hold Shift, then click several lanes in the Name column.
Choose Lanes > Select All Lanes, then deselect lanes you don’t want to change by
Shift-clicking them.
Any alterations you make in the inspector affect all selected lanes.
Change the event type
The event status determines the type of event controlled by each lane.
In Logic Pro, drag the event type shown beside the Status parameter vertically to
choose one of the following:
Fader: Defines a fader event lane. Fader event data can be used to control any
possible parameter (except channel volume and pan that use controllers). Fader data
can also be used to create meta events.
Meta: Defines a meta event lane. Meta events are internal Logic Pro commands that
can perform tasks such as screenset switching.
Note: Defines a lane for a particular note pitch (useful for drum programming).
Control: Defines a MIDI controller lane.
A-Touch (Aftertouch): Defines a lane for aftertouch (also known as channel
pressure), a feature of many synthesizers that adds vibrato, for example, when you
press down on MIDI keyboard keys that are already held.
P-Touch (Polyphonic Aftertouch): As above, but each note can be independently
modulated.