<p>
- Sometimes you will want to edit MIDI data directly from a connected
+ Sometimes you will want to edit MIDI data directly from a connected
MIDI device like a music keyboard or pad controller. Sometimes you will
- want to use the mouse. Sometimes you'll want the fine-grain control,
- precision and speed of entry that comes from using a custom note entry
- dialog.
+ want to use the mouse. Sometimes you'll want the fine-grain control,
+ precision and speed of entry that comes from using a custom note entry
+ dialog.
</p>
<p>
- The step entry dialog is accessed via a right click context menu on the
- rec-enable button, because step entry is related to <em>recording</em>
- MIDI data. You cannot simultaneously step edit and record MIDI via the
+ The step entry dialog is accessed via a right click context menu on the
+ rec-enable button, because step entry is related to <em>recording</em>
+ MIDI data. You cannot simultaneously step edit and record MIDI via the
track's MIDI port.
</p>
<img src="/images/a3_step_entry.png" />
<li>Dynamics controls from pianississimo to fortississimo</li>
<li>Channel selector</li>
<li>
- Explicit numerical velocity selector, for more precise control
+ Explicit numerical velocity selector, for more precise control
than the dynamics selectors offer
</li>
<li>Octave selector</li>
<li>a full 10 octave virtual keyboard</li>
</ul>
<p>
- More or less all actions in the step entry dialog can be driven
- directly from the keyboard, so you do not need to keep moving back
+ More or less all actions in the step entry dialog can be driven
+ directly from the keyboard, so you do not need to keep moving back
and forth from keyboard to mouse to do complex data insertion.
</p>