11.3

Table Of Contents
SOUNDS, PATCHES AND THE BROWSER72
About patches
A patch contains settings for a specific device. Patches can be either separate files on your hard disk or files embed-
ded in a ReFill (see “About ReFills” for info about ReFills). A Rack Extension often comes with patches embedded
within the Rack Extension itself.
A patch most often includes all parameter settings on the front panel, but not cables and trim pot settings on
the back side.
However, a few Rack Extensions have additional parameters on the back panel which are included in the patches.
A Combinator patch is special in that it contains both settings for the device itself (the Combinator settings)
and all settings for all contained devices.
This includes all routing within the combi, and all settings on the back panels as well.
Patches for devices that use samples (samplers, loop players, drum machines) contain references to sample
files on disk.
The samples themselves are not part of the patches.
Some devices don't have patch support at all.
Should you need to save the state of such a device, put it inside a Combinator device and save a combi patch!
About the “Load Default Sound in New Devices” setting
If this is activated in the Settings dialog, a default patch is loaded when a device is created. This way, the device is
ready for playing right away. This will also determine the default folder when you browse for patches for the device.
If you turn this setting off, new devices will be initialized - parameters are reset to their default values and no samples
are loaded in sample-based devices.
Loading patches
Loading patches can be done in the following ways:
By using the patch selector directly on the device panel.
Either click and select from the menu that appears, or use the Previous/Next Patch buttons next to the display.
By opening the browser, dragging a patch from there and dropping it on a device.
By dragging and dropping patch files from a Windows / Mac window and dropping it on a device.
By clicking the Browse Patch button for a device or selecting Browse from the context menu.
This opens the browser and gives the device "browse focus" - read more about this in “Opening the Browser and
setting Browse Focus” below.