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But I never let myself forget the fact that I judge Reaper with a far softer tone because I can always say, 'Well, it was only $60 (or $225 when I finally start using it for more consistent professional work)'. To be honest, I'd much rather use Reaper over Nuendo any day of the week, no questions asked. PT at home because it has a fast, consistent, clear-and-easy-to-understand editing workflow like none other, and Reaper because I need surround monitoring at home and don't want to pay for PT HD or Nuendo. Nuendo at work.īecause it's what we have. Reaper, PT (vanilla not HD), and Nuendo 7.x. At the cost of Pro Tools HD or Nuendo, you'd expect more built-in key commands, the ability to directly assign a mono output to the mono output of another channel without having to 'pan', the ability to render odd-numbered channels, consistent and clear playback samplerates, organized plug-in subgroups, a timeline that understood when it was crossing the 2400hr threshold, X-Or cancelling solos, and much more that didn't require the user to create a script to incorporate the functionality. Imagine paying $2000 for Reaper.Ĭan you honestly say it would be viewed quite so wonderfully by so many people? People are very quick to be delighted in Reaper's customizability without regard for the necessity of customizing it in order to make it functional to begin with. It's very easy not to hold Reaper up to the same standards of Pro Tools HD and Nuendo because it's so much cheaper. I think the biggest factor in Reaper's favor is price. I'll be the naysayer just so there is one. Sadly that is the way of the Internet Generation. Biggest single complaint I see on the actual reaper forums nowadays seems to go 'I have wanted XXX (niche feature) for YEARS and Cockos is ignoring me! Reaper sucks!' Reaper DOES have to appeal to your inner geek a little for you to really love it! What I like is that through three payments and no less than five versions there are new features added and more importantly bugs squashed on an absurdly regular basis. I am a fairly long term user - since version 1.x - but I have to agree with the sentiments expressed in many forums. REAPER PRO TOOLS KEY COMMANDS MAC WINDOWSMy only remaining goal is to get rid of Windows and get my studio running on Linux. It's served me better (home studio) than any other DAW app I've had. I just voluntarily paid my second subscription fee, and was glad to do so. ![]() You may have to do it yourself once, but after you save the config you won't ever have to do it again. ![]() ![]() I know you can program the hot keys to be anything you want, the canned ones are editable and the rest is whatever you can conjure up with your keyboard and your imagination. I know I can do it myself but would be nice if something could save me those hours) as well as making all the custom key-commands depending on what program you come from.I can't answer your question, except to say that I have the Reaper Power book (and one other Reaper book) and the things you mention sound familiar, as if I've read about doing that in the books. I wish there was a program file with reaper that made subgroups of plugins automatic (So I can have subgroups like Pro Tools, instead of a long list. Maybe there is and i've missed it, in that case i would be happy to try it out! All in all, I actually wish Reaper had a more easy and simple way to go at it, like other daws have. I know I can do it myself but would be nice if something could save me those hours) as well as making all the custom key-commands depending on what program you come from. Probably because you can do too much in Reaper, and It's hard to grasp everything, even though i've spent countless ours following tutorials. With that said, I have a hard time letting go of both Pro Tools and Reason. 'If you learn reaper, then you can do anything'. Reaper is the first program that I recommend to people starting out. You can close the search result window with the escape key. Pro Tools provides keyboard shortcuts for many Edit window and Mix. (Mac Only) Hold down the Command key and click the mouse. REAPER PRO TOOLS KEY COMMANDS MAC MAC OSHide Pro Tools, Shift+Ctrl+H, Yes, Normal Mac OS shortcut for Hide is Command + H, which in Pro Tools. Gain (AS plug–in) +6dB, Shift+Ctrl+G, No. Zoom Toggle, E, N/A, Already a Pro Tools shortcut. As you look for keyboard shortcuts? 2 keeps your commonly used tools. ![]()
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