Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello everyone.
I have not been working with Audition for a while. Would you please explain the different between these Two.
Thank you very much.
Let's see if we can do this in straightforward terms:
Waveform editing is destructive - you open a file, and any changes you make to it are made permanent when you save it. If you make a selection from within a file and apply an effect to it, you can't undo this once you've saved the file.
Multi-track editing is non-destructive; you aren't editing any audio files at all. What you do when you place a clip onto a track is a selective playback of it. If you trim the clip at the ends, then you are pla
...Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Not quite sure that I understand the question since an Effects Rack on a Track are the Track effects. However is the question that you are asking Track Effects vs. Clip Effects, both of which have their own Effects Racks?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Dear ryclark.
I think my question Is related to use of Multitrack, or Waveform.
I noticed Inside Multitrack, you can use both Clip Effects, and Track Effects. But Inside Waveform you cant use both, am I correct ?
Would you please explain the different of using Clip Effects, and Track Effects, Inside Waveform, and Multitrack.
Thank you very much.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Let's see if we can do this in straightforward terms:
Waveform editing is destructive - you open a file, and any changes you make to it are made permanent when you save it. If you make a selection from within a file and apply an effect to it, you can't undo this once you've saved the file.
Multi-track editing is non-destructive; you aren't editing any audio files at all. What you do when you place a clip onto a track is a selective playback of it. If you trim the clip at the ends, then you are playing less of it - but it doesn't alter the fact that you have done nothing to the original file at all. So any effects added are simply applied to the playback of that clip. They aren't permanent unless you take deliberate steps to make them so. Because of the nature of this, it's possible to apply an effect either to a whole track of clips (A track effect) or just to an individual clip in the track (a clip effect). When you save the session, a session file is created, and that indicates what files are used, where they go, and what effects are applied - but this contains no audio whatsoever.
To make a permanent file of your multi-track mix, you either have to mix it down to one, or export it. When you've done this, that file becomes the permanent copy of it. If you want to make alterations to that, you have to go back to the multi-track mix, make the alterations, and save it again.
HTH
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Dear SteveG
Thank you very much
Find more inspiration, events, and resources on the new Adobe Community
Explore Now