User manual

Table Of Contents
52
The Project window
The Snap function
The Snap function
The Snap function helps you to find exact positions when editing in the Project
window. It does this by restricting horizontal movement and positioning to certain
positions. Operations affected by Snap include moving, copying, drawing, sizing,
splitting, range selection, etc.
You turn Snap on or off by clicking the Snap icon on the toolbar.
When you are moving audio events with Snap activated, it is not necessarily the
beginning of the event that is used as Snap position reference. Instead, each audio
event has a snap point, which you can set to a relevant position in the audio (such as
a downbeat, etc.).
The snap point is preferably set in the Sample Editor since it allows for a higher
degree of precision (see
“Adjusting the snap point” on page 334). However, you can
also set the snap point directly in the Project window, in the following way:
1. Select an event.
2. Place the project cursor at the desired position within the selected audio event.
3. Open the Audio menu and select “Snap Point To Cursor”.
The snap point is set at the cursor position.
The snap point for an event is displayed as a vertical line in the Project window.
The Snap Type pop-up menu
To determine how the Snap function works, open the Snap Type pop-up menu and
select one of the available options.
Grid
If you select this Snap type, the Snap positions are set with the Grid Type pop-up menu.
The options depend on the display format selected for the ruler. For example, if the ruler
is set to show bars and beats, the grid can be set to bars, beats, or the quantize value
set with the selected quantize preset. If a time or frame-based ruler format is selected,
the Grid Type pop-up menu contains time or frame-based grid options, etc.
When Seconds is selected as ruler format, the Grid Type pop-up menu contains time-based
grid options.