-<dl class="narrower-table">
- <dt>Normal</dt>
- <dd>Tracks in <dfn>normal mode</dfn> will record non-destructively —
- new data is written to new files, and when overdubbing, new regions will be
- layered on top of existing ones. This is the recommended mode for most workflows.
- </dd>
- <dt>Non-Layered</dt>
- <dd>Tracks using <dfn>non-layered mode</dfn> will record non-destructively
- — new data is written to new files, but when overdubbing, the existing
- regions are trimmed so that there are no overlaps. This does not affect
- the previously recorded audio data, and trimmed regions can be expanded
- again at will. Non-layered mode can be very useful for spoken word material,
- especially in combination with <a href="/editing-and-arranging/change-region-lengths/pushpull-trimming/">push/pull trimming</a>.
- </dd>
- <dt>Tape</dt>
- <dd><dfn>Tape-mode</dfn> tracks do <strong>destructive</strong> recording:
- all data is recorded to a single file and if you overdub a section of existing
- data, the existing data is destroyed irrevocably — there is no undo.
- Fixed crossfades are added at every punch in and out point. This mode can be
- useful for certain kinds of re-recording workflows, but it not suggested for normal
- use.</dd>
-</dl>
+<table class="dl">
+ <tr><th>Normal</th>
+ <td>Tracks in <dfn>normal mode</dfn> will record non-destructively—new
+ data is written to new files, and when overdubbing, new regions will be
+ layered on top of existing ones. This is the recommended mode for most
+ workflows.
+ </td></tr>
+ <tr><th>Non-Layered</th>
+ <td>Tracks using <dfn>non-layered mode</dfn> will record
+ non-destructively—new data is written to new files, but when
+ overdubbing, the existing regions are trimmed so that there are no overlaps.
+ This does not affect the previously recorded audio data, and trimmed regions
+ can be expanded again at will. Non-layered mode can be very useful for spoken
+ word material, especially in combination with
+ <a href="@@pushpull-trimming">push/pull trimming</a>.
+ </td></tr>
+ <tr><th>Tape</th>
+ <td><dfn>Tape-mode</dfn> tracks do <strong>destructive</strong> recording:
+ all data is recorded to a single file and if a section of
+ existing data is overdub, the existing data is destroyed irrevocably—there is no
+ undo. Fixed crossfades are added at every punch in and out point. This mode
+ can be useful for certain kinds of re-recording workflows, but it not
+ suggested for normal
+ use.</td></tr>
+</table>