Specifications

Chapter 27: Editing Clips and Selections 607
Clip gain for any whole clips within the Edit selec-
tion is rendered and their clip gain settings are reset
to 0 dB.
Consolidating Clips
During the course of normal edit operations, any
track can accumulate many clips. However, once a
track or track range (such as a verse or chorus)
reaches a satisfactory state, you may want to con-
solidate multiple clips into a single clip.
When consolidating an entire audio track or just an
Edit selection, a new audio file is written that con-
sists of the entire selection, including any blank
space.
When consolidating, muted clips are treated as si-
lence. Otherwise, whether or not a track is muted,
or contains Mute automation, does not affect the
Consolidate command.
To consolidate clips within a track:
1 Do one of the following:
Using the Time Grabber or Selector tool, select
the clips you want to consolidate.
To select all clips in a track, triple-click in its
playlist with the Selector tool.
2 Choose Edit > Consolidate.
Compacting an Audio File
The Compact command deletes unused portions of
audio files to conserve disk space, and to prepare
for cleaner hard drive back-ups. The
Compact Se-
lected
command also deletes any audio files for
which there are no clips on tracks referencing those
files.
Because it permanently deletes audio data, the
Compact command should be used only after you
have completely finished your editing and are sure
that you have no further use for the unused audio
data.
For clips with any clip gain settings other
than 0 dB, the Prepare DPE Tracks com-
mand (for DestructivePunch) automatically
renders all clip gain settings and resets all
clip gain settings to 0 dB.
When processing in an AudioSuite mode that
renders in clip gain, any clip gain settings
are rendered first, and then AudioSuite pro-
cessing is applied. Clip gain is reset to 0 dB
for the resultant clip. However, when creat-
ing individual files with AudioSuite, or over-
writing files clip-by-clip, clip gain settings
are preserved. For more information, see
“Conditions for AudioSuite Rendering with
Handles, Fades, Clip Gain, and Metadata”
on page 870.
Consolidating an audio track does not
consolidate underlying automation data. To
create a single file with automation data ap-
plied to the audio, use Bounce to Disk (see
“Bounce to Disk” on page 1082).
Press Alt+Shift+3 (Windows) or
Option+Shift+3 (Mac) to Consolidate.