[Rwp] OSARA keymap

Scott Chesworth scottchesworth at gmail.com
Tue Feb 24 06:05:52 EST 2015


Big +1 to the item grouping example. I use this feature to slice and
dice the best bits of multi-mic'd drum takes. Will be adding it to
GitHub tonight.

> On 24 Feb 2015, at 10:18, Gianluca Apollaro via RWP <rwp at bluegrasspals.com> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
> Let me add two example to where I think having echoed information can be necessary:
> 1. When we split an item rea-access reports that an item has been added. Now let's say we're working with two tracks and we're scrubbing to edit and we want to split. We can need the split to occur on both or on just one of the tracks. If you hit s the split will happen on both of the tracks, but in osara you don't know that 2 items have been added, rea-access would tell you when you hit s. A sighted user would exactly know which tracks have been splitted.
> 2. This is a mor advanced example. When grouping items there is an action that selects all items in a group. It would be good to have that echoed because it happened to me that I groupped a certain number of items, but something went wrong and only one item got added to that group. If I had no way of telling how many items were in the group, I would have to go back and restart my work, but selecting them let me know how many of them were in that group. If anybody is thinking why item grouping is useful, that is when you deal with stretch markers.
> I hope I could make my point clear enough.
> James keep up the good work,.
> Best regards,
> Gianluca from Italy
> SkypeID: gianluca8815
> Il 24/02/2015 08:01, James Teh via RWP ha scritto:
>>> On 24/02/2015 4:45 PM, Derek Lane via RWP wrote:
>>> I'd rather run in to too much information, than not enough.
>> That's fine, except reporting an action which didn't actually occur is not too much information; it's more like misinformation.
>>
>>> That's why, in some cases, reaaccess gave me the edge when I could instantly get information, even if it wasn't visible on screen.
>>> Control+shift+J being a perfect example.
>> Actually, sighted users can glance at the time on screen (depending on time ruler unit), which is probably a valid argument for having a command like that. Hitting control+j then escape can be done quite fast and is only one extra keystroke, but you do have to listen to irrelevant stuff about the dialog, so I can see how that would be inefficient. So, if you want it, file an enhancement in GitHub.
>>
>> Jamie
>
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