How Do I Delete a Cycle?
I can't find this anywhere in the manual or boards.
iMac, Mac OS X (10.6.8)
I can't find this anywhere in the manual or boards.
iMac, Mac OS X (10.6.8)
Hi
Do you mean "turn off the cycle function":
(simply click on the green cycle are in the Bar Ruler or click on the Cycle button in the Transport),
or "delete the looping part of a looped region"
(select the region and uncheck the loop function in the Region Inspector, move the mouse pointer to the top right of the region loop area and drag to the left, put the pointer tool to the top of a looped 'area' whilst holding down Option, etc etc)?
CCT
Sorry, I'm new at this and really struggling with seemingly simple things.
I want to completely remove the green bar in the ruler. Northing I do seems to work.
The green bar, i.e., the first picture. I know I can disable it with the second one.
Thanks.
Press c (key command)
Try to put out of your mind the need to delete it, and be satisfied turning it off
🙂
You cannot delete it, you can turn it on or off though. By 1) clicking in the green bar itself, by 2) using the button in the transport or by 3) using the key command / (backslash). Keycommand "c" is for toggling the click, not the cycle.
Hi
Eriksimon wrote:
3) using the key command / (backslash). Keycommand "c" is for toggling the click, not the cycle.
A note for anyone posting about specific keycommands: most are user-definable, so it will depend on which key command preset loaded (or customised) what the actual keystrokes for a particular function.
In this case, the defaults are:
US preset with Numeric Keypad: C turns on/off the Click, the "/" on the numeric pad turns cycle on/off
US Preset (no numbers): C turns the Cycle on/off, K turns the clicK on/off
"your milage may vary"
CCT
In my posts the default keycommands I refer to are always from the US with Numeric Keypad preset (to check I switch from my personal set), unless the OP has indicated (s)he works on "laptop machines", in which case I'll refer to the US (no numpad) preset.
Laptop machines
apltop machines
apltop mac hines
appl to mac hines
Apple to mac hins
Apple Mac hins to
Apple Macintosh
Hi Erik
Agreed that there are potential issues here, and no crticism intended, merely raising the issue for comment, and attempting to defuse an arguement :-)
One problem is that most Macs today are supplied with small (no numbers) keyboards, unless it is possible to specify otherwise.
Another is that whilst trying to help posters here and elsewhere, we have no idea which KC preset they have loaded, or if they have customised it in any way. We could assume that they have loaded the "appropriate" set as you suggest.
Whilst I too prefer to work with a "numbers keyboard", working with the standard "no numbers" preset means that the KC's will generally always work, regardless of the keyboard attached, or the Mac you are working with.
For these reasons, I gravitate towards the "No Numbers" set, and I generally try not refer to "default" KC's without specifying.
Again, no criticism intended, and "your milage may vary" :-)
CCT
CCTM wrote:
Hi Erik
Agreed that there are potential issues here, and no crticism intended, merely raising the issue for comment, and attempting to defuse an arguement :-)
One problem is that most Macs today are supplied with small (no numbers) keyboards, unless it is possible to specify otherwise.
Another is that whilst trying to help posters here and elsewhere, we have no idea which KC preset they have loaded, or if they have customised it in any way. We could assume that they have loaded the "appropriate" set as you suggest.
Whilst I too prefer to work with a "numbers keyboard", working with the standard "no numbers" preset means that the KC's will generally always work, regardless of the keyboard attached, or the Mac you are working with.
For these reasons, I gravitate towards the "No Numbers" set, and I generally try not refer to "default" KC's without specifying.
Again, no criticism intended, and "your milage may vary" :-)
CCT
No criticism taken, and your quite right: mileage may vary. It also depends on the Logic chops of whoever is asking; often you can tell that they are very likely still using the default preset set of KC's, and if they are not, then they know how to operate those commands anyway and won't ask about it. But, I have to keep adding the disclaimer, as you now did.
Eriksimon wrote:
In my posts the default keycommands I refer to are always from the US with Numeric Keypad preset (to check I switch from my personal set), unless the OP has indicated (s)he works on "laptop machines", in which case I'll refer to the US (no numpad) preset.
Laptop machines
apltop machines
apltop mac hines
appl to mac hines
Apple to mac hins
Apple Mac hins to
Apple Macintosh
me too
😊
When I got Logic 8 and was reading the manual (paperback) , it said Cycle mode could be turned on and off using
the key command. My copy of logic came with that command being "c". I didn't realize other copies of Logic came with a dfferent default. Now I do 😮
No, we're both "right", and I'm oldfashioned for not realising that many people also use numpadless keyboards for their desktop machine, as CCTM pointed out.
This is one of the sets of commands that differ in the numpad and no numpad version. You've always used the one, I've always used the other. It's good to realise that these two are different depending on keyboard.
numpad:
c = click on/off
/ = cycle on/off
no numpad:
c = cycle on/off
k = click ("klick"?) on/off
Hi, I don't know how (haven't figured out) to post a screen shot of my key commands. I'm running the current version 9.1.8 on a MBP with a USB keyboard w/numpad. Off to the movies, have a great day!
How Do I Delete a Cycle?