Cakewalk // Documentation // CakewalkSonar // Track Inspector controls
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InspectorsTrack Inspector overview ► Track Inspector controls

The Docking Options menu lets you dock/undock/float/collapse the Inspector pane.
Hardware out faders can be linked using the Link button . This allows you to adjust both the left and right channel at the same time.
Opens the Patch Browser dialog dialog box, which lets you search for patches by name.
The Display menu lets you show/hide modules in the Track Inspector.
The Module Options menu lets you configure settings for various modules.
Click the Display control at the bottom of the Track Inspector, point to Module Options > Sends and choose one of the following options:
A. Input gain B. ProChannel C. FX Rack D. Sends E. Mute, Solo, Arm, Input Echo, Phase Invert, Stereo Interleave, Read Automation, Write Automation F. Pan G. Volume H. Meter I. Track icon J. Input and output K. Track name and number L. Track color M. Display menu
A. Input gain and pan B. ProChannel C. FX Rack D. Sends E. Mute, Solo, Waveform preview, Read Automation, Write Automation F. Pan G. Volume H. Meter I. Bus Icon J. Output K. Bus name L. Bus color M. Display menu
A. Velocity trim (MIDI tracks) / Input gain (Instrument tracks) B. FX Rack C. Channel/Bank/Patch D. Mute, Solo, Arm, Input Echo, Read Automation, Write Automation E. Pan F. Volume G. Meter H. Track icon and number I. Input and output J. Track name K. Track color L. Display menu M. Chorus and Reverb N. Snap to Scale O. Input Quantize P. Arpeggiator Q. MIDI offset controls (Key+ and Time+) R. Open Patch Browser S. Bank Select Method T. Audio and MIDI tabs (Instrument tracks only)
A. Audio output B. MIDI controls
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Chorus. Adds MIDI chorus effect to the track.
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Reverb. Adds MIDI reverb effect to the track.
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Key+. The number of half steps by which the notes in the track are transposed on playback (e.g., 12 to transpose up one octave)
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Time+. The number of Ticks that the track’s playback timing is offset from the other tracks.
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Patch Browser. Opens the Patch Browser dialog dialog box, which lets you search for patches by name.
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Bank Select Method. Your synthesizer uses one of four bank select methods to switch back and forth between banks of sounds. To find the method used for your instrument, check the instrument’s User’s Guide or the manufacturer’s website. The four methods are as follows:
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Normal. Use for instruments that respond to Controller 0 or Controller 32 bank select messages.
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Controller 0 only. Use for instruments that only respond to Controller 0 bank select messages.
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Controller 32 only. Use for instruments that only respond to Controller 32 bank select messages.
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Patch 100...127. Use for instruments that let you change banks by sending patch changes between 100 and 127.
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Snap to Scale On/Off. Enables/disables Snap to Scale on the selected track.
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Scale. Displays current scale for Snap to Scale feature. The drop-down menu contains the following options:
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<scale categories>. The pre-installed scales are organized into categories such as Diatonic, Pentatonic, Exotic, etc. Point to the desired category and select a scale from the submenu.
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Custom User Scales. This submenu lists all custom scales you have created.
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Scale Manager. Select Scale Manager to create new scales or edit existing scales. See To create a scale and To edit or delete a scale.
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Root Note. Use this field to specify the root note of the selected scale.
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Settings. Use this field to specify how you want Sonar to handle non-scale notes in the Piano Roll view when Snap to Scale is enabled.
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Next, Higher Note. Sonar moves any non-scale note that you move to the next higher note in the selected scale.
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Previous, Lower Note. Sonar moves any non-scale note that you move to the previous, lower note in the selected scale.
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Nearest Note. Sonar moves any non-scale note that you move to the note that is closest in pitch in the selected scale.
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Input Quantize On/Off. Enables/disables Input Quantize on the selected track.
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Preset. Save or select settings that you use often in the drop-down menu. To save a new group of settings, click the Preset list and choose Quantize Settings to open the Input Quantize dialog box, then type a name in the Preset field and click the Save button. To delete a group, select it and click the Delete button. The Input Quantize dialog box contains the following settings:
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Resolution. Set the note resolution in either standard note duration or tick value. The resolution determines the size note or time value that you want your MIDI data to conform to.
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MIDI Event Start Times. Select this option to quantize MIDI event start times.
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Note Durations. Select this option to quantize Note Event durations to the size of the Resolution value.
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Only Quantize Notes. If selected, Sonar will not modify other events, such as controllers.
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Strength. This value determines how closely Sonar moves the selected notes to the resolution value, or “grid”. See Strength.
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Swing. Use this value to make groups of even eighth notes (or whatever note you want to enter in the Resolution field) “swing”, instead of playing with exact eighth note rhythm. A value of 50 percent, or “50-50”, produces equal durations for both notes—no swing. A larger value makes the first note longer, and vice versa. See Swing.
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Window. This value determines whether Sonar quantizes notes that are far from the quantization points, or leaves them alone. A value of 100 percent quantizes every note. See Window.
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Randomize. This value randomizes the three previous fields to introduce a more human feel to the rhythm. The value you enter is the maximum amount of difference from the entered values that the randomize feature can add.
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Arpeggiator On/Off. Enables/disables the Arpeggiator on the selected track. This control can be assigned to MIDI remote control and modified in real-time during project playback.
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Preset. You can create and edit Arpeggiator presets; all user parameters are stored in the preset. Arpeggiator settings are included in track templates.
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Rate. Adjusts the relative speed of the Arpeggiator sequence by changing all the note durations by a factor of the current tempo. This control can be assigned to MIDI remote control and modified in real-time during project playback.
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Lock Rate. Lock the current arpeggiator Rate value, thereby preventing the Rate value from changing when you select other arpeggiator presets.
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Octave Range. Sets the number of octaves through which the arpeggio will play. A value of 1 means that a held chord will only arpeggiate the notes that are being held within the octave from which the notes are being transmitted. A value of 2 means a held chord will arpeggiate for two octaves. The held chord always represents the bass octave, meaning that the other octaves sound in a higher register.
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Latch. Latch keeps the arpeggio playing after you let go of the keys.
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Swing. Sets the amount of swing applied to the selected pattern. You can make a pattern of 8th, 16th, or 32nd notes play back as swing notes instead of straight notes. The amount of swing ranges from 0 (no swing) to 100% (maximum swing).
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Velocity. An offset control that scales the arpeggiated note’s velocity to a percentage of the original note velocity.
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Duration. Controls whether the notes in the pattern are held to their full value, or are held for shorter or longer durations.
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Pitch. A transposition control in half-steps, up or down a maximum of 2 octaves.
Flam. If a pattern contains flams, this menu controls how big a difference there is between the attack time of the flam and the note it is attached to.
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Mix. When 0, simultaneously held notes arpeggiate as single notes. At 50%, simultaneously held notes are heard as a chord in addition to the usual arpeggiated notes, both at equal levels. At 100%, only the held chord is audible.
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Channel. MIDI input and output menu—the Arpeggiator only affects input data that’s on the MIDI channels listed on this menu. The Arpeggiator always obeys the track’s assigned output channel, plus any additional channels specified in the Arpeggiator’s Ch menu.
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Shape. Choose a shape that specifies the direction in which currently held notes are to be sequenced. The following shapes are available:
A. Mute B. Link channels C. Volume D. Meter E. Icon F. Hardware Output name G. Display menu
Click the Display control at the bottom of the Track Inspector and select the modules you want to show/hide.
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Input Gain. Show/hide Input Trim/Gain/Pan controls.
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ProChannel. Show/hide ProChannel controls, which includes Equalizer, Compressor and Tube Saturation.
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FX Rack. Show/hide FX Racks.
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Sends/Bank/Patch. Show/hide Send controls for audio tracks and buses, or Bank/Patch/Channel controls for MIDI tracks and Instrument tracks.
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MSR. Show/hide Mute, Solo, Arm for Recording, Input Echo, Phase Invert, Mono/Stereo, Read Automation, Write Automation and Waveform Preview controls.
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Pan Control. Show/hide Pan controls.
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Volume. Show/hide Volume controls and meters (and Link controls for hardware outputs).
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Icon. Show/hide track icons.
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In/Out. Show/hide Input and Output controls
Figure 295. Use the Display menu to configure modules in the Track Inspector.
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