5.0

Table Of Contents
213
The MIDI editors
The Score Editor – Overview
The Score Editor shows the MIDI notes as a musical score.
The window contains the following sections and items:
The toolbar
The Score Editor toolbar is similar to the toolbar in the Key
Editor, with the following differences:
The Score Editor toolbar has a button for showing or hiding
the extended toolbar (see below).
There are no active part settings – in the Score Editor, parts
on different tracks are shown on different staves.
There are no chord recognition functions.
The info line
The info line shows information about selected MIDI
notes, just like in the Key and Drum Editors. You can edit
all values on the info line using regular value editing (see
“Editing on the info line on page 192 for details).
To hide or show the info line, click the “Show Info” but-
ton in the toolbar.
The extended toolbar
The extended toolbar (shown or hidden by clicking the
“Show Tool Strip” button on the main toolbar) contains
the following items:
Note value buttons
Click one of these to select a note value for input. The “T”
and “.” options are for triplet and dotted note values. You
can also press [Ctrl]/[Command] and click one of the note
value buttons – this will resize all selected notes to the
note value you choose.
Enharmonic shift
Allows you to manually select whether a note should be
shown with flat or sharp accidentals, see “Enharmonic
Shift” on page 219.
The score display
The main area of the Score Editor window shows the
notes in the edited parts on one or several staves.
If you are editing one or several parts on the same track,
as much of them as possible is shown on several staves –
one above the other – just as with a score on paper.
Toolbar
Info line
Extended
Toolbar