</p>
<p class="note">When performing meter or tempo operations, it is advised that you show the BBT ruler (available by right-clicking an existing marker or ruler name),
and ensure that the constraint modifier is set (in Preferences->User Interaction) so that no other modifiers share its key combination.<br>
- The constraint modifier is the "Constrain drags using : " setting under the "When Beginning a Drag" heading. One viable setting is control-shift.
+ The constraint modifier is the "Constrain drags using : " setting under the "When Beginning a Drag" heading. One viable setting is <kbd class="mod1"></kbd><kbd class="mod3"></kbd>.
</p>
<h3>Tempo</h3>
<br>
<li>To change a meter, double click it. A dialog will appear.</li>
<br>
-<li>To copy a meter, hold down control and drag it.</li>
+<li>To copy a meter, hold down <kbd class="mod1"></kbd> and drag it.</li>
<h3>Techniques </h3>
<p>As a general approach, the best way to control tempo ramps is to use them in pairs.
We now locate the earliest position where the click doesn't match, and place a new tempo just before this.
Two bars later, place another new tempo.
</p>
-Now while dragging any beat <strong>after</strong> the second new tempo, watch the drum audio and tempo lines until they align.
-<p class="note">
-Notice what is happeneing here: the tempo previous to your mouse pointer is being changed so that the beat you grabbed
+<p>Now while dragging any beat <strong>after</strong> the second new tempo, watch the drum audio and tempo lines until they align.
+</p>
+<p class="note">Notice what is happeneing here: the tempo previous to your mouse pointer is being changed so that the beat you grabbed
aligns with the pointer.
Notice that the tempo lines previous to the changed one also move. This is because the previous tempo is ramping <strong>to</strong> the tempo you are changing.
Look further to the left. The tempo lines in the first four bars do not move.