![]() ![]() It makes me feel stupid, which is not fun.Īgain, I know it's arrogant - but I think locking to screen fit should be the default. And have a really hard time getting back to where I was editing (zooming back in takes you do a different place from where you zoomed out). every time I zoom out (countless times per session) on a 3 second file, I would suddenly be seeing 336:00:00 hours of blank project. The only reason I switched was because of the zoom and panning in Audacity. I wrote this patch for myself after I realized I stopped using Audacity for quick audio edits (I started using Ocenaudio for quick edits and small files, and Audacity for multitrack and mastering). Just to be clear: I realize that it is very arrogant of me to come along and suggest a major change to the default behavior of Audacity - seeing as I have very little understanding of the complexity of either the codebase history or the myriad of user's use cases. Pain points - though I have not tested it on Windows where the mouse It feels more intuitive (to me), and alleviates my personal ![]() Make "nicer defaults" (especially for beginners or new Audacity I have tested this commit with short, long, and very longįiles/tracks - single track and multitracks, and I feel like they On my test machines (Mac, Linux, with trackpads andĮxternal mice) it is still possible to go from absolute minimum toĪbsolute maximum zoom with a single gesture - but it is far easier to The speed changes make it easier to control movement and target areas The zoom-out command (and keyboard shortcuts) will still zoom outįurther if the user wants a more compressed view (eg, to paste audioĪt a future location) and mouse zooming will work as expected when Waveform getting "lost", which is confusing. Will not zoom out any further with the mouse. Zooming out to fit the screen: once the waveform fits on the screen it Pan (by 50%) and zoom (by 90%) per event. Makes zooming and panning simpler by slowing down the amount of ![]()
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