</figcaption>
</figure>
+<figure class="right">
+ <img class="mini" src="/images/template_setup.png" alt="One of the Template Setup Dialogs">
+ <figcaption>
+ One of the Template Setup Dialogs
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
<p>
This page allows to type in the name of a session, select a folder to save it in, and
optionally use an existing <a href="@@session-templates">template</a>.
</p>
<p>
- Under <dfn>Advanced Options</dfn>, some fine tuning can be done, like selecting
- whether Ardour should create a Master Bus, or a Control Bus, and how many channels
- the output should have.
+ The different templates, both the "factory" ones and the ones created by the user,
+ are easily available on the left-side panel. Depending on the chosen template,
+ a specific Template Settings window may be shown, allowing the user to fine-tune
+ the details of the template and/or choose between the different options of the
+ template.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ Templates can be huge time savers when working on similar projects, or on
+ usual projects, as they allow to preset and tweak a lot of the <a
+ href="@@session-properties">session properties</a>, (like the
+ availability of a <a href="@@monitor-section">monitoring section</a>,
+ connection to a Master Bus, etc.), and handle the creation of <a
+ href="@@adding-tracks-busses-and-vcas">tracks</a> of any kind.
+</p>
+<p>
+ The <kbd class="menu">Empty Template</kbd> preset allows to create a session
+ "from scratch". Everything a session template does can be done manually
+ —albeit more tediously— and the resulting sessions will not differ
+ whatsoever.
</p>
<p>
- Other options also decide whether Ardour should automatically connect all inputs
- to the hardware's physical ports. Ardour will do so
- sequentially and in round-robin fashion, connecting the first track's
- input to the first input of the hardware and so on. When Ardour has used
- all available hardware inputs, it will begin again with the first physical
- input.
+ As of Ardour 5.12, which introduced the new template dialog, the factory templates are:
</p>
+
+<table class="dl">
+ <tr><th><kbd class="menu">Empty Template</kbd></th>
+ <td>Creates an empty session with no tracks and no monitoring. A stereo Master Bus is created, and any track created defaults to output on this bus.</td></tr>
+ <tr><th><kbd class="menu">Advanced Session</kbd></th>
+ <td>Like the Empty Template, but adds the ability to easily manage the Master bus (channels, hardware connection, and track autoconnection), and the creation of a monitoring section.</td></tr>
+ <tr><th><kbd class="menu">Recording Session</kbd></th>
+ <td>Like the Empty Template, but allows the fast creation of a number of tracks, optionally ready to record.</td></tr>
+ <tr><th><kbd class="menu">Live Band</kbd></th>
+ <td>Fast tracks the creation of usual tracks for a band setup (vocals, guitars, piano, ...), and optionally adds usual effects on these tracks.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
<p>
- The number of hardware channels used by Ardour can also be limited.
+ Selecting a template will display its description in the right-side panel, while
+ hovering over a template name will show a tooltip indicating if it is a factory
+ template, or, if it is a user-created one, which version of Ardour was used to
+ create it.
</p>
<p>
- By default Ardour will connect all tracks and busses to the Master Bus if
- there is one. However, it can also be told to automatically connect each
- output to the physical outputs of the interface or sound card, and limit
- the number of physical outputs used, as above.
+ Whether or not a template is used, and before the "Template Setup" dialog, the
+ Audio/MIDI Setup will be shown.
</p>
<h2 class="clear">Audio/MIDI Setup</h2>
use <kbd class="menu">NetJack</kbd> which provides network audio I/O.
</td></tr>
<tr><th>Device</th>
- <td>The selector should show all availiable interfaces provided by the
+ <td>The selector should show all available interfaces provided by the
driver above and which are capable of duplex operation.
<p class="warning">
When using an Intel Mac running OS X and the builtin audio
<tr><th>MIDI System</th>
<td>
Selects the MIDI driver to use. On Mac OS X, this will be <kbd
- class="menu">CoreMIDI</kbd>. On Linux, it can be changed between two legacy
+ class="menu">CoreMIDI</kbd>. On Linux, this will follow the audio backend.
+ If the Audio backend is ALSA, midi will be alsa also. If the backend is
+ JACK, it can be changed between two legacy
ALSA drivers or the (preferred) new JACK+ALSA implementation.</td></tr>
</table>
+