3 Every MIDI note consists of two messages, a NoteOn and a NoteOff. Each one
4 has a note number and a channel (also a velocity, but that isn't relevant
5 here). The MIDI standard stresses that it is invalid to send a second NoteOn
6 for the same note number on the same channel before a NoteOff for the first
7 NoteOn. It is more or less impossible to do this with a physical MIDI
8 controller such as a keyboard, but remarkably easy to trigger when editing
9 in a DAW—simply overlapping two instances of the same note will do it.
12 Ardour offers many options for how to deal with instances where you overlap
13 two instances of the same note. Which one to use is a per-session property
14 and can be modified from <kbd class="menu">Session > Properties > Misc > MIDI
18 <dl class="wide-table">
19 <dt>never allow them</dt>
20 <dd>Edits that would create note overlaps are not allowed</dd>
21 <dt>don't do anything in particular</dt>
22 <dd>Ardour leaves overlapping notes alone—the behaviour of a MIDI receiver (plugin or hardware) is undefined</dd>
23 <dt>replace any overlapped existing note</dt>
24 <dd>When one note is moved to overlap another, remove the one that wasn't being moved</dd>
25 <dt>shorten the overlapped existing note</dt>
26 <dd>When one note is moved to overlap another, shorten the one that wasn't moved so that there is no overlap</dd>
27 <dt>shorten the overlapping new note</dt>
28 <dd>When one note is moved to overlap another, shorten the one that was moved so that there is no overlap</dd>
29 <dt>replace both overlapping notes with a single note</dt>
30 <dd>When one note is moved to overlap another, merge them both to form one (longer) note</dd>
33 Changing the option in use will not retroactively make changes—it will
34 only affect new note overlaps created while the option remains chosen.
37 Ardour does not check for note overlaps across tracks or even across regions.
38 If you create these, it is your responsibility to deal with the consequences.