18.0

Table Of Contents
Editing in the track view 65
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There are two ways to edit these volume curves:
A "handle" is created by clicking on the curve (in standard mode). You can
then move it with the mouse and create volume progressions. This method
should preferably be used if gradual volume changes over longer passages
are needed.
Additionally, you can use the Volume curve mouse mode (view page
39). This allows you to "draw" any
volume curve using the mouse
and lets you create irregular volume progressions quickly.
Tip: The Voice over effect (view page 110) creates volume curves for
automatic fading in/out based on the audio material in the second track.
Quick zoom
For many tasks it is quite useful to enlarge the wave shape display.
For quickly zooming it is sufficient to click in the timeline, keep the mouse
button pressed and move it up or down. This way you can quickly zoom the
cursor in and out at any position without releasing the mouse.
Set track markers
In many occasions you will not load single songs, one after the other, into a
project, but a certain number of them at the same time, for example while
recording one side of an LP.
If you want to record this LP on a CD, you should first set track markers at the
beginning of each song. The track markers can already be set while recording
in the Record dialogue – "by hand" or automatically by the automatic CD
Track detector (see below). It is however also possible to set, move and delete
the track markers afterwards by using the 1click-Burn-Automation (view page
115).