Hi Martin,

Actually, it does work. I did it just now. Perhaps what you're thinking of is 
that it doesn't work when you're in bars and beats. In that case, a minus in 
front of the bar number would assume there are negative count-in bars before 
bar 1, which is a common thing. I've pointed this out and asked if it might be 
possible to somehow move backwards by a fixed number of bars with a key 
sequence but that hasn't been tackled yet. As for minutes and seconds, the 
sequence does work.
Cheers,
Slau

> On Jan 26, 2018, at 2:02 AM, Martin (Punky) Sopart <m...@cakewalker.de> wrote:
> 
> Hi Slau!
> 
> Sounds very interesting.
> Thanks for supporting us over there.
> 
> Maybe you could ask for another all time bug.
> I reported it several times to Avid.
> 
> Moving e.g. 7 bars forward by pressing Numpad-Star, Numpad-Plus, Numpad-7, 
> Numpad-Enter works great.
> But the opposed direction - using Numpad-Minus instead of Numpad-Plus - does 
> not work at all but is still in the Pro Tools manual.
> 
> Best! / Martin
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: ptaccess@googlegroups.com [mailto:ptaccess@googlegroups.com]
>> On Behalf Of Slau Halatyn
>> Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2018 10:28 PM
>> To: PTAccess List <ptaccess@googlegroups.com>
>> Subject: new features and shortcuts in the new Pro Tools 2018.1
>> 
>> There are a bunch of new features and shortcuts in Pro Tools 2018.1
>> announced today at NAMM. Yes, the version numbers are different now and
>> reflect year dot month of release. Anyway, below is  a brief look at the new
>> shortcuts and their functions but first, the big news:
>> 
>> The track record button now accurately reports when it is selected. No more
>> having to read the button multiple times to verify whether it's armed or not
>> because of it flashing on and off. The same applies to the Global Record
>> button in the Transport. This has been an issue from day one and I asked that
>> this be made a priority fix last time I visited Avid and it went through a 
>> few
>> iterations in beta before they got it right but they did nail it. Yay for 
>> fixes!
>> 
>> 
>> Designate current playlist as target playlist
>> Command+Shift+right arrow
>> Any playlist can now be designated as the target playlist to which clips or
>> selections from any other playlist can be copied or moved. When a playlist is
>> selected, pressing Command+Shift+Right Arrow designates that playlist as
>> the target playlist.
>> 
>> Copy selection to target playlist
>> Shift+Option+up arrow
>> Let's say you've  created a track called Vocal and you've recorded a number
>> of takes on playlists. Let's assume you have four recorded takes on playlists
>> named Vocal.01, Vocal.02, Vocal.03 and Vocal.04. Let's say you've designated
>> Vocal as the target playlist. For clarity, let's assume you renamed the 
>> playlist
>> Vocal Comp and your goal is to compile a series of clips or selections from 
>> the
>> various takes to put on the comp track. Let's say you decided that take 3 was
>> the overall best take. Using Shift+Up/Down Arrows, you'd select the Vocal.03
>> playlist, select the entire range of the timeline and simply press
>> Option+Shift+Up Arrow to copy it to the target playlist, Vocal Comp, without
>> having to copy, then select the Vocal Comp playlist and paste. It's just one
>> shortcut. Of course, you'll still be on Vocal.03. So, now, let's say you know
>> that the first phrase in verse 2 is better in take 4. You can Shift down 
>> Arrow to
>> get to vocal.04, select the phrase in question and hit Option+Shift+Up arrow
>> to send it to Vocal Comp. Essentially, this workflow replaces the use of
>> playlist lanes where one would have to click in a lane, solo it to hear it 
>> and
>> then press Control+Option+v to copy to the Main Playlist. The Main playlist 
>> is
>> the currently selected playlist and, now with the introduction of a Target
>> playlist, one can essentially send from any playlist to any designated target
>> playlist.
>> 
>> Move selection to target playlist
>> Option+Shift+t
>> If, instead of copying a clip or selection to the target playlist, you'd 
>> rather
>> move the selection to the target playlist rather than copying, Option+Shift+t
>> is your friend. Flo Tools users will recognize that this Keyboard shortcut 
>> is the
>> the command to Speak Selected Tracks. The new version of Flo Tools now
>> uses a different shortcut. Refer to the What's New in Flo Tools document to
>> find out more.
>> 
>> Toggle recent playlists
>> Shift+left arrow
>> Pressing this shortcut will simply toggle quickly between 2 playlists
>> 
>> Show target playlist
>> Shift+right arrow
>> No matter how many playlists you have or which playlist is currently 
>> selected,
>> pressing Shift+Right Arrow will select the Target Playlist.
>> 
>> Cycle in audio from previous playlist
>> Command+Shift+up arrow
>> Cycle in audio from next playlist
>> Command+Shift+down arrow
>> These two commands are perhaps the most powerful playlist editing
>> shortcuts. what these commands do is cycle in audio from other playlists
>> when a selection range is made. Without having to switch playlists, it's now
>> possible to audition audio from other playlists in context. Let's say you 
>> were
>> on your Vocal Comp playlist and you had your previously recorded 4 takes
>> and you had chosen take 3 as overall best take, just like the previous
>> scenario. Let's say the song was "Mary Had a Little Lamb." So let's say you 
>> had
>> your chosen take copied into the target playlist and you're listening to the
>> first line and the word "little just doesn't sound right. What you can now 
>> do is
>> select the word "little" in the playlist and press Command+Shift+Down
>> Arrow. Now, the word "little will be the performance from Vocal.01.
>> Everything else remains the same and unchanged. Only the word "little" has
>> changed. Pressing Command+Shift+Down Arrow again will now cycle in
>> "little" from Vocal.02. You can continue to audition the selected range from
>> each available playlist until you're happy with the performance. When you're
>> satisfied, you can simply continue on. The entire time, you've never left the
>> Target playlist and only the selected range was cycling through the other
>> available playlists. Think of this as sort of selecting a different playlist 
>> for only
>> the selected range rather than the entire timeline. It's extraordinarily
>> powerful and, if you use Pre/Post Roll, you can audition the target playlist 
>> in
>> context so you hear the result of the edit before committing to it. As long 
>> as
>> your selection range stays in tact, you can keep cycling up or down. When
>> you're happy with the choice, simply move on.
>> 
>> Retrospective MIDI record
>> Shift+c
>> Some of you will remember the trick of hitting record at the end of a
>> rehearsal take to be able to expand the audio in the buffer. Whenever
>> people say, "Oh, I wish we had been recording," as long as the transport is
>> still rolling when they say it, you can easily retrieve the performance. 
>> Well,
>> now the same thing exists for MIDI. Press Shift+c to capture the MIDI
>> performance that was happening while the transport was engaged.
>> 
>> Transpose Selected MIDI note up/down by half step
>> up/down arrows
>> When a MIDI note is selected in Notes View, pressing Up/Down Arrow will
>> transpose it on the fly by a semitone. This is great for quick MIDI note 
>> editing.
>> Thing is, this is also the shortcut for capturing the current time code into 
>> the
>> Start Counter. Down Arrow will still do this when in an audio track and will
>> also work in a MIDI track if there's no note selected. Otherwise, if you 
>> press
>> down arrow while the transport is engaged, what you'll actually do is
>> transpose the selected note down again by one half step. The bottom line is
>> that there are a number of shortcuts now in Pro Tools that do one thing in an
>> audio track and a different thing in a MIDI track. Be careful and stay aware 
>> of
>> what is currently selected and you'll be fine.
>> 
>> Transpose Selected MIDI note up/down by octave
>> Shift+up/down arrows
>> Same rules apply as above but instead of semitone, notes are transposed by
>> octave.
>> 
>> Transpose Selected MIDI Note Up/Down in Key
>> Control+up/down arrow
>> This command relies on key signature and chord recognition which is not yet
>> accessible but, by default, you might have some success. Essentially, rather
>> than chromatic tranposition, notes will increment based on chord.
>> 
>> Note that adding the Option modifier to the above transposition shortcuts
>> will duplicate the selected note before transposing. In other words, if you
>> have b3 selected and you press Option+Up Arrow, the b3 will remain and a
>> new note with the pitch c4 will be created at the same point in the timeline.
>> Pressing Up Arrow again will transpose the c4 to C Sharp 4. This is a fast 
>> way
>> to stack notes to generate chords in place.
>> 
>> You can think of the following shortcuts as equivalents to the shortcuts used
>> to trim the left and right edges of selected clips only this works for 
>> selected
>> MIDI notes.
>> Trim note on by current nudge value
>> Control+left/right arrow
>> Trim note on by next greater nudge value
>> control+Shift+left/right arrows
>> Trim note off by nudge value
>> Option+left/right arrows
>> Trim note off by next greater nudge value
>> Option+Shift+left/arrows
>> 
>> The following shortcuts provide a quick way of raising or lowering MIDI Note
>> On values on the fly rather than typing in a value.
>> Increase/decrease velocity by 5
>> Command+up/down arrows
>> Increase/decrease velocity by 15
>> Command+Shift+up/down arrows
>> 
>> Save track preset
>> Option+Shift+p
>> 
>> Track Presets are new to Pro Tools and it's beyond the scope of this email to
>> cover how track presets work. You'll need to refer to the What's New pdf to
>> get the scoop on that.
>> 
>> Hope this helps,
>> 
>> Slau
>> 
>> 
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