Although track/bus <a href="@@the-track-and-bus-group-list">groups</a> offer a certain
kind of grouped-control over gain, solo, mute and more, traditional mixing consoles have long had
group master channels ("<abbr title="Voltage-Controlled Amplifier">VCA</abbr>s") which allows to combine
- both a single fader to control the group level while also allowing you to easily adjust the relative
+ both a single fader to control the group level while also allowing to easily adjust the relative
levels inside the group. For large projects, this can make mixing much easier to control.
</p>
<p>
Ardour implements those <dfn>VCAs</dfn> in a way that allows to use either or both
- of the conventions used on different traditionnal consoles for combining multiple masters:
+ of the conventions used on different traditional consoles for combining multiple masters:
</p>
<ul>
<li>Nest VCAs (VCA 2 controls VCA 1 etc.)</li>
<h2>Connecting to a VCA strip</h2>
-<img class="left" src="/images/connecting_to_vca.png" alt="Connecting to VCA">
+<figure class="left">
+ <img src="/images/connecting_to_vca.png" alt="Connecting to VCA">
+ <figcaption>
+ Connecting to a VCA
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
<p>
Connecting a track/bus/VCA to a VCA is as simple as clicking the VCA button that appears on any mixer strip
under the main fader and choosing the VCA to connect to.
</p>
-<p class="note">The VCA button only shows up in mixer strips when at least one VCA exists, i.e., a
- VCA must be created <em>before</em> connecting tracks to it.</p>
+<p class="note">
+ The VCA button only shows up in mixer strips when at least one VCA exists, i.e., a
+ VCA must be created <em>before</em> connecting tracks to it.
+</p>
<p>
Clicking the VCA button shows all the VCAs in the session, and any or all of this VCA can be checked