Steinberg Nuendo 4 Manual
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Page 391
391 The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer If you select one of the Bar Range options in the Condi- tion column, the Bar Range column will show a graphic bar display. You specify the range within the bar by click- ing and dragging in the bar display (the specified Bar Range is indicated in blue). The Logical Editor will then find all events starting inside or outside this Bar Range, in all bars (within the current selection). Here, the Logical Editor will find events starting around the...
Page 392
392 The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer Searching for controllers There is similar extended functionality when searching for controllers: If you’ve added an additional “Type = Control- ler” condition line, the Logical Editor will “know” you are searching for controllers. The Parameter 1 column will then show the names of the MIDI controllers (Modulation, Volume, etc.) when Value 1 is selected as Filter Target. Searching for MIDI channels Each MIDI event contains a MIDI channel...
Page 393
393 The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer In this example, the action will be performed when the note C1 is pressed (the “Note is playing” condition is only available in the Input Transformer and in the Transformer effect): In this example, the action will be performed after playing the C1 note: Combining multiple condition lines As described above, you can add condition lines by click- ing the Add Line button to the right of the list. The result of combining condition lines depends...
Page 394
394 The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer ÖExpressions within brackets are evaluated first. If there are several layers of brackets, these are evaluated “from the in- side out”, starting with the innermost brackets. You add brackets by clicking in the bracket columns and selecting an option. Up to triple brackets can be selected. Editing filter conditions as text The area directly below the filter condition list shows you the current filter conditions as text. It also allows you to...
Page 395
395 The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer Specifying actions The lower list in the Logical Editor window is the action list. This is where you specify any changes that should be made to the found events (relevant for all function types except Delete and Select). The handling of the action list is similar to the filter condi- tion list, but without the brackets and booleans. You sim- ply add lines by clicking the Add Line button to the right, and fill out the columns as required. To...
Page 396
396 The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer Set Relative Random Values between This will add a random value to the current Action Target value. The added random value will be within the range specified with Parameter 1 and 2. Note that these can be set to negative values. For example, if you set Parameter 1 to -20 and Parameter 2 to +20, the original Action Target value will get a ran- dom variation, never exceeding ±20. Set to fixed value This sets the Action Target to the value...
Page 397
397 The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer Applying the defined actions Once you have set up filter conditions, selected a function and set the required actions (or loaded a preset), you ap- ply the actions defined with the Logical Editor by clicking the Do It button. Logical Editor operations can be undone just like any other editing. ÖAgain, when using the Transformer MIDI effect there is no Do It button. The processing is applied to the events played back from the track (or played...
Page 398
398 The Logical Editor, Transformer and Input Transformer In both cases, the button lights up and the Input Trans- former opens. Handling the four modules The Input Transformer is really four separate transformers, or modules. You select which module to view and make settings for by clicking its button in the Selected Module section. Module 2 selected for viewing and editing. The checkboxes in the Active Module section determine which module(s) are active. Here, modules 1, 2 and 4 are active. The two...
Page 400
400 The Project Logical Editor Introduction On the Edit menu you will find the function “Project Logi- cal Editor…” that opens a Project Logical Editor for the entire project. It works similar as the Logical Editor on the MIDI menu, see “The Logical Editor, Transformer and In- put Transformer” on page 387. The most important differ- ence is, that the Logical Editor for MIDI works on event level whereas the Project Logical Editor works on project level, and is therefore a very powerful tool for...