deckard1 wrote:Thanks for everything. I think the hardest thing is 'unlearning' my workflow from Logic after so many years. I was discussing this with Magic Dave as well. I think it would be a lot easier if I was starting from the beginning with DP being my first DAW. One thing I have learned about DP that didn't really apply to Logic is the importance of reading the manual. Sounds ridiculous, but very true nonetheless.
Thanks
Unlearning another app is indeed the hardest part of working in a new one. When I learned Logic, I tried to approach with an open mind, realizing that everything was going to be different. I did learn to use it, but there were just too many things that I could do better, faster, in DP. Some of those things were not due to my prior bias, but simply because those particular things were designed and implemented better in DP. Some not.
Yes, the manual is your friend. Another thing that helps me a great deal is to print out the COMMANDS window. It can take close to 30 pages. Make a PDF as well as a hard copy. Just reading over those commands can give you great ideas for workflows you may never think of without seeing what's available.
Then there is the DP Tips Sheet. I apologize for the poor organization. The forum is not a database, so all I can do is edit the messages, appending each tip to the list as I get around to it. (That also takes an enormous amount of time that I don't have!) But I've given you hooks that help to find things. For example, you can search for "recording," and then hit COMMAND-G to advance to each tip about recording. Or "Tracks Overview" might be a good place for you to start.
Lastly, the Tracks Overview Window DOES do regions, though not the same way that Logic does them. You can control how they are parsed in Preferences, and you can make them any length. I usually leave them at 8 bars, though that can change depending on what I'm doing. Using the Command-key to turn off the grid, you can select even down to a particular note in the Tracks Overview, or select by grid, range, or region. When you learn it, the TO window is incredibly helpful.
One last thing: note that when you are selecting in the TO window, if your cursor is at the TOP of a cell, you get a range selector [+]. Elsewhere in the cell you get a pointer which selects the cell or region. The selection methods are nuanced, so there are several ways of getting what you want.
Shooshie