Product manual

Fade In: The fade in speed of a step
Hold: The hold time of a step
Fade Out: The fade out speed of a step
Duration: The duration of a step
Copies of chaser functions can be created with the Function Manager. The scenes inside a
chaser are not duplicated when a chaser is copied. Only the order and direction are copied to the
new one.
Click And Go
Starting from version 4.3.0, QLC+ can benefit of the Click And Go technology. This set of
functionalities will allow users to quick access macros and colors in a completely visual way and
with just a couple of clicks. This can lead to more efficient live shows and more freedom to
choose the desired result very easily.
So far, three types of widgets are available:
Single Color (applies to: Red, Green, Blue, Cyan, Yellow, Magenta and White intensity
channels)
RGB Color Picker. Controls values for selected RGB channels with a single click
Gobo/Macro Picker. Access and display a Gobo/Macro defined in the Fixture definition
An overview with screenshots is available here
Collection
A collection function encapsulates multiple functions that are run simultaneously when the
collection function is executed. Any number of functions can be inserted to a collection, but each
function can be inserted only once and a collection cannot be a direct member of itself.
Collections have no speed settings. Each member function's speed is set individually thru their
own editors.
Copies of collection functions can be created with the Function Manager. The functions inside a
collection are not duplicated; only the list of functions is copied.
DMX
DMX is short for Digital MultipleX. It basically defines a whole bunch of properties, protocol,
wiring etc. but in the case of a lighting software, it defines the maximum number of channels
(512) per universe and the channels' value range (0-255).
QLC+ supports 4 individual universes, that need not be necessarily connected to DMX hardware;
rather, DMX has just been selected as the de facto lighting standard. Actual hardware abstraction
(whether it's analog 0-10V, DMX or some other method) is achieved thru output plugins.
EFX
An EFX function is mainly used to automate moving lights (e.g. scanners & moving heads). The
EFX can create complex mathematical paths on an X-Y plane that are converted to DMX values
for the fixture's pan and tilt channels. Only fixtures that contain valid pan & tilt channels can
take part in an EFX function.
As of version 3.3.0, each EFX has their own speed settings:
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