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Steinberg Nuendo 4 Manual

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Page 381

381
The MIDI editors
Deleting events in the controller display
You delete events by clicking on them with the Eraser tool 
or by selecting them and pressing [Backspace]. Please 
note:
Deleting a controller event makes the last event before 
this valid up until the next event. It does not “zero” any 
controller changes.
You can delete notes by deleting their velocity bars in 
the controller display.
Please be aware that if there is more than one note on the same position, 
there may still only be one...

Page 382

382
The MIDI editors
To zoom or scroll the In-Place Editor, point at the left 
part of the piano keyboard display so that the pointer 
changes to a hand. Now you can click and drag to the 
right or left to zoom in or out vertically, and drag up or 
down to scroll the editor.
Clicking on the little gray triangle in the upper right cor-
ner of the Track list for the edited track brings up a local 
toolbar with some settings specific to the In-Place Editor.
For descriptions of these settings, see “The...

Page 383

383
The MIDI editors
The List Editor – Overview
The toolbar
The toolbar contains several items that are the same as in 
the Key Editor (edit solo, snap, quantize settings, etc.). 
These are described earlier in this chapter. The following 
toolbar items are unique to the List Editor:
The Insert pop-up menu is used when creating new 
events.
This is where you determine what type of event to add (see “Inserting 
events” on page 384).
The Mask pop-up menu and Filter view (Show Filter 
View button) allow you...

Page 384

384
The MIDI editors
List Editor operations
Customizing the view
You can click and drag the divider between the list and 
the event display to make one area wider and the other 
narrower. Furthermore, the list can be customized in the 
following ways:
You can change the order of the columns by dragging 
the column headings.
You can resize columns by dragging the dividers be-
tween the column headings.
Setting the display format
Just like in the Project window, you set the display format 
(bars+beats,...

Page 385

385
The MIDI editors
ÖFor SysEx (system exclusive) events, you can only edit 
the position (Start) in the list.
However, when you click the Comment column, the MIDI SysEx Editor 
opens, in which you can perform detailed editing of system exclusive 
events (see “Working with System Exclusive messages” on page 410).
Editing in the event display
The event display allows you to edit the events graphically 
using the tools on the toolbar. You can edit single events 
as well as several selected events...

Page 386

386
The MIDI editors
In addition to the above options, the menu also gives you 
access to the presets available in the Logical Editor (see 
“The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer” 
on page 387). Furthermore, the “Setup…” item on the 
Mask pop-up menu gives you direct access to the Logical 
Editor. In that editor you can create very complex masking 
settings.
When you apply any of the presets from the Logical Editor 
or use the Logical Editor to create masking settings your-
self, only the...

Page 387

28
The Logical Editor, Transformer and
Input Transformer 

Page 388

388
The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer
Introduction
Most of the time you will perform your MIDI editing graphi-
cally in one of the main graphic editors. But there are times 
when you want more of a “search and replace” function on 
MIDI data, and that’s where the Logical Editor comes in.
The principle for the Logical Editor is this:
You set up filter conditions to find certain events.
This could be events of a certain type, with certain attributes or values or 
on certain positions,...

Page 389

389
The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer
Window overview
Selecting a preset
To understand the Logical Editor, it might be a good idea to 
start by exploring the included presets. These are found on 
the Presets pop-up menu at the bottom of the window, to 
the right.
To load a preset, select it from the Presets pop-up menu.
The window will show the settings stored in the preset. As the preset is 
not applied to the MIDI events yet, you can load different presets just to 
study them...

Page 390

390
The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer
You can also set up filter conditions by dragging MIDI 
events directly into the upper list.
If the list contains no line entries, a MIDI event dragged into this section will 
form conditions including the state and type of the event. If it contains en-
tries, the dragged event(s) will initialize the matching parameters. E.g. if a 
length condition is used, the length will be set according to the event 
length.
Conditions
The options in the...
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