![]() But as you have decided to switch DAW, you should also accept that certain things in your workflow needs to be changed when switching to another DAW. I understand that you are coming from FL Studio and there is certain things, that you are used to in terms of workflow and how you do stuff, that you like to be implemented in Cubase. Those are amazing shortcuts (and thank you so much for bringing them up here, now I’m using them everyday). Let the Steinberg Devs integrate it wisely, with legacy users in mind, I’m sure they’ll make it flawlessly for everyone.įor the slip audio, I’m against because when you do this a lot and are doing it fast, it’s like ALT+CLICK to cut then CTRL+ALT+DRAG to slip then SHIFT+MW to scroll. (So, not bad for a “toy” right? No seriously I just wanted to show you how inspiring and fresh it can be to see what’s going on in other DAWs, Steinberg Developers clearly do).Ĭannot support anything that could lead to accidental nudging or changes if mouse cursor is at the wrong place, specially in the key editor where there are notes all over the place.īut that’s where “options / settings” come into place. By the way, Acid Pro is the DAW that came up with these 3 concepts that are now in Cubase (and Sonar):.The ultimate loop-based DAW was Acid Pro.FL Studio was a pattern-based software, not not loop-based.So I believe this is not a show-stopper for Steinberg’s developers. If you look carefully, you’ll realize Cubase has inspired itself from other DAWs in the past MANY times, and that’s what it’s still doing (Ableton Live’s “Lower Zone” and Window Management in Cubase 9.0 / 9.5…).Well I’m neither am I (and I used Cubase since v5.5).Don’t really care what the FL Studio users are accustomed to as I’m a Cubase user and not a FL Studio user.
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