Zooms in on the horizontal axis of the audio, displaying more detail
about less time. You can also use the zoom tool to zoom in on a
particular part of the window.
Zooms to the default view, which displays about one inch per second.
Zooms out, displaying less detail about more time.
Zooms out until the entire project just fits in the window.
Adjusts the height of all the tracks until they fit in the project window.
Zooms in until the selected audio fills the width of the screen to show the
selection in more detail.
Sets the format in which selections are measured in at the
bottom of the application window. Combined with setting Set Snap-To Mode
to ON, this is ideal to cut stuff up in to exact measures.
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Brings up the history window. It shows all the actions you have performed during the current session,
including importing. The right-hand column shows the amount of HD space your operations used.
You can jump back and forth between editing steps quite easily by simply clicking on the entries
in the window.
The history window can be kept open at all times. It doesn't interfere with any other operations.
To use this feature, first select a region of audio from a single
track, then select "Plot Spectrum".
It opens up a window which
displays the Power Spectrum of the audio over that region, calculated
using the Fast Fourier Transform. The graph represents how much
energy is in each frequency.
This window can also display other common
functions that are calculated using the Fast Fourier Transform, including
three versions of the Autocorrelation function.
The Enhanced Autocorrelation function is very good at identifying the pitch of a note.
Toggles between displaying the tool docked at the top of each
project window, or in a separate floating window. You can also float
any toolbar by grabbing the handle on the left side and dragging
it to the location you want.
Once they are floating these options change to docking the
toolbars back into the main window.
Do the same thing for the other toolbars
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