Yes, I'm pretty sure I've done that once (delete the peak files), and it worked. I will double-check this when I get back in the studio next week. These clips were all mono, and yes, this only happens when I record new material (on a different track).
Greetings, lieven On Tue, Jun 24, 2014 at 7:21 PM, J. Liles <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > On Tue, Jun 24, 2014 at 10:20 AM, Lieven Moors <[email protected]> > wrote: >> >> On Sun, Jun 22, 2014 at 10:53:42PM +0100, John Rigg wrote: >> > On Sun, Jun 22, 2014 at 04:29:26PM +0200, Lieven Moors wrote: >> > > I've been experiencing a bug with non-timeline, >> > > but I'm not sure what happens exactly... Before I file >> > > a very vague bug report, I thought I would ask here >> > > if anyone has experienced something similar. >> > > >> > > It happens when I record a new track, that suddenly the >> > > waveform of _another_ track changes its visible waveform. >> > > The waveform of the track that changed stills shows some >> > > audio information, but it is completely wrong. It looks >> > > a bit like I've recorded background noise on that track, >> > > although the track still plays the right audio. >> > > >> > > It seems something goes wrong with the peak files... >> > > >> > > Anybody experienced something like this? >> > >> > Does the changed waveform stay changed if the window is redrawn >> > (Ctrl-L) or if the session is closed and reopened? >> > >> > I haven't seen this here, but sometimes the timeline window needs to be >> > redrawn when I resize it (not a serious problem). >> > >> > John >> >> No, redrawing has no effect on this, and closing and opening the session >> neither. It's happening quite often, but I have no idea what circumstances >> are triggering this. Only thing I can do is delete the peak files. >> > > And that works? That is to say, the problem is only when recording new > material and doesn't affect the regeneration process? Also, are these clips > mono or multi channel? >
