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In FL Studio, when I roll the mouse wheel over a note that is not selected, it changes the volume of the note. If you put a note and move the mouse without releasing the button, the note will not stay in place, but will follow the cursor.ĥ. If you select a note and then create a new note, the new one will be an exact copy of the old one (including velocity and channel). In FL Studio, a note is created by clicking inside the pianoroll. Moving the "camera" in FL Studio is smoother.Ĥ. Moving the "camera" in the pianoroll vertically shifts it in jerks, one square at once. This is not a very serious problem, but this question plays in FL Studio's favor. But it shouldn't move when I click on the track.ģ. However, there is really no way to conveniently offset the playback position in FL Studio. When I open pianoroll, the playback position is not shifted. The right mouse button opens it immediately in the place where I clicked. Possibility to open pianoroll by clicking on it with the left mouse button. There is a rectangle to the left of the track - if you select it and press "Ctrl + C", the notes will be copied.Ģ. Ability to quickly copy notes from one track to another, and even from multiple tracks to other multiple tracks. However, none of these programs otherwise compare to Reaper for me.ġ. In none of these programs pianoroll can compare to FL Studio.
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In all other respects (apart from what I listed above) Reaper is superior for me not only FL Studio, but Cubase, Sonar, Abletone and everything I tried to use. My music creation process now starts with typing notes (General Midi) in FL Studio, and then I go to Reaper to do the rest of the stuff for this project. What FL Studio does "by itself", in Reaper you have to do it yourself - if FL Studio in this regard takes care of the user, then in Reaper (pianoroll) the user must take care of himself.
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It took me a long time to set it up (I know that Reaper allows it), but with any setting, there is a great feeling of inconvenience. Apart from other inconveniences that Reaper has (such as design, working with General Midi, etc.), pianoroll is what worries me the most. I don't make commercial music, so I can afford it. Yes, I didn’t buy FL Studio, because it doesn’t suit me in many ways. So don't be discouraged if some functionality or user experience aspect seems to be missing at first - chances are that it's possible in some way or another. One thing to remember is that REAPER is very user-configurable and can be personalized much more than any other closed-source DAW. Perhaps they could know to advice you more specifically, if you rename the title of this thread to "How to make piano roll behave like in FL Studio" or something to that effect. There are other FL Studio users on this forum, and some of them have configured their REAPER MIDI Editor to be much like Piano Roll in FL Studio (I have not). A good start is to open Options > Preferences > Editing Behavior/Mouse Modifiers, go through MIDI-related settings and see whether changing them will make MIDI Editor behave as you wish. I suggest that you try customizing mouse modifiers and other aspects of REAPER's MIDI Editor. REAPER's MIDI Editor is in some ways superior to FL Studio's Piano roll, because it is more user-configurable and includes some functionality that is missing from FL Studio. And I have never seen a pianoroll anywhere (in other DAWs) that compares to it in FL Studio.Īs user of both FL Studio and REAPER, I disagree.
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It's a pianoroll that sucks compared to that in FL Studio.