Thanks, Steve. Sometimes I forget about those keys and functions. That
would certainly be a good thing, and it would give me the opportunity
to tweak the results before actually applying them.

Now, I still need to know, how to detect the presence or absence of in
and out markers, and if they exist, what happens if you attempt to use
the mark-in and/or mark-out keys a second time? Does it toggle their
existence, or move them? And then, what about if you want them
removed? or nulled out, in effect? If I knew where they were and how
to move or detect them, I'd feel a lot better about it all.

On Fri, 04 Oct 2013 08:50:06 -0500, you wrote:

>Steve,
>
>I don't have a copy of Sound Forge here at work or I would be more specific, 
>but when I am going to delete something I use the key 
>that reads the pre-roll and post-roll without reading the selection which I 
>believe is CONTROL-K.  This, in effect, shows me how 
>the delete will work without actually performing the deletion.  That allows me 
>to avoid having to undo the action.  This also 
>allows me to see in advance that my selection isn't what I expected.  I've had 
>the same problem that you have had where sometimes 
>it seems that the beginning of my selection is stuck at a previous point 
>instead of where I just marked.  I've had this problem 
>with a good number of versions of Sound Forge now so I assume this is probably 
>not a bug but rather something I am not 
>understanding.  It is probably obvious visually.  <smile>
>
>Best regards,
>
>Steve Jacobson
>
>On Fri, 04 Oct 2013 08:18:05 -0400, Steve Matzura wrote:
>
>>I am having two troubles with this. First, how do you know where the
>>marks are once you press the I or O keys? Second, if you mark
>>something, then delete it, decide you don't like how it sounds and
>>want to do it over, and use the Undo function, what happens to the
>>markers? Are they brought back, or do you have to re-mark? Third,
>>after marking in and out points and deleting, sometimes when I press
>>the PageUp key, I get thrown back to some previously marked point, or
>>I discover that the in mark is somewhere way off in the distance. How
>>did that happen, and how do I prevent it from happening? It doesn't
>>happen often, but when it does, it's a major source of annoyance and
>>frustration because it means I have to go back and redo something I
>>thought I'd done right the first time but hadn't.
>
>>TIA if you know what's going on and set me straight on it.
>
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>
>
>
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