There's a lot more flexibility in the layout than your post suggests.
Here's an example that covers a few of your comments.
Moderator: James Steele
What appears to be the meter bridge on the right side - is that a floating window? And if it is will it scroll to the channel selected like the mixer can when it's in a sidebar?bayswater wrote:Yam, there is a preference to open the mixer in the side bar or in the CW centre. Just set that. As for other windows that don't open in the side bar, just open them as independent windows, size and position them where you want, adjust the CW to cover the rest of the screen and save it as a screenset.
There's a lot more flexibility in the layout than your post suggests.
Here's an example that covers a few of your comments.
The meter bridge is in its own window, partly covered so only the meters themselves are showing. In this case, it is set to show the main outputs.musicman691 wrote: What appears to be the meter bridge on the right side - is that a floating window? And if it is will it scroll to the channel selected like the mixer can when it's in a sidebar?
The only problem I have once I unclicked each of the items in preferences so they wouldn't open in the CW is that the first time I open an old project it will open the CW even though I have that unchecked. So I close the CW and click on a window set I have made that doesn't use the CW and go about my work. Once I save and close that project every time it opens afterwards the CW does NOT open.apanacci wrote:Wish I could shut it of all together. I know in preferences its says you can shut it off, but it does not.
I'm with you apanacci, my brain is already programmed from many years of using tons of shortcuts,apanacci wrote:Wish I could shut it of all together. I know in preferences its says you can shut it off, but it does not.
I don't know if you've fully explored the options for the CW. You can have any window popped out of it, made full-screen, even occupy its own virtual monitor in Spaces (Mission Control).yamguitar wrote:I have never gotten really comfortable with the consolidated window. I love its neat look, and I want it to work for me, but I frequently find that once a project has more than a dozen or so tracks, it means I have to constantly use the mouse to see what I want, as opposed to just jumping rapidly between several maximized windows with key commands... that seems a shame to me. I also feel I can never see enough of the sequence editor with it squished at the bottom of the screen in the lowest cell.
My biggest issue with the CW is that certain kinds of info can only be docked to horizontally- or vertically-oriented windows. For example, I like to have my meter bridge be the full height of the screen... much easier to see when I'm across the room trying to juggle a guitar, a bluetooth keyboard and a music stand. As I'm usually recording myself, I generally only need to see a couple of inputs on it at a time. It seems silly to me that if I use the consolidated window I'm forced to dock it in a horizontally-oriented window, in which I can see meters for dozens of unused inputs/outputs, but be denied the full height (and thus the full visibility) of the input meters when I'm trying to set levels. It's very rare for me to have more than four musicians maximum in the studio at a time, so having a zillion visible meters that give less obvious information is much less valuable to me than having a big, fat meter I can easily use for the other 90% of the time when it's just me tracking solo in the studio.
That said, I have been trying to use the CW for a while now, seeing if I can find a way in which it will help my workflow. So far, the most obvious is that I like having my desktop totally obscured by DP when I'm deep into mixing... somehow I find it less visually distracting and more satisfyingly console-like. (Not that I have ever really used a console that much.)