On Mon, 8 May 2017 00:02:08 +0200, Maurizio Berti wrote: >> Real gear as well as virtual gear is connected one time, there's no >> need to have a picture of all connections. Select the MIDI channel of >> the wanted MIDI instrument, name the audio and bus faders, that's it. >> On a real mixing console you would use a permanent maker to write on >> tape. > >No, you don't. You use that workflow if, and only if, you are using a >permanent setup. I don't. I'm not using a permanent setup. I even add or remove instruments and effects during a production. If I'm doing this, I connect or remove an instrument or effect, but there's no need to have an overview of all connections. The only thing I need to know is what MIDI track is for what instrument and what audio track is for what instrument, as well as what mixer channel or bus is for what usage. To know this, I give the tracks and mixer channels/buses names, let alone that the virtual mixer provides the info about the I/Os by text, too. Could you please give a plausible example why you need a graphic overview of all connections during a production? >Or... keep it as it meets your needs. :-) >I never said that QjackCtl is not valid, it just isn't right for *my* >needs (again, MY needs, which are different than yours or than anyone >else), and I think that having complex routing layouts it actually >doesn't work right. Again, according to MY needs, MY workflow and MY - >always different and mutable - setups. Sure, everybody is free to use what s/he prefers. However, if I would teach a class how to manage audio connections for a project, I would teach the proved way. Give everything a name with the keyboard if using virtual gear or with permanent marker on a tape, if you are using a real mixing console or patchbay. There usually is no reason for graphic extravagance, it's just time consuming, time that gets lost for the project. It doesn't matter if you connect, disconnect, reconnect tens or hundreds of connections. You only need to care about one at a time and you can forget about it, after you have connected or disconnected something. There are a few exceptions, where a graphic makes sense, but those exceptions aren't covered by Patchage, they have more to do with e.g. building a studio, than with using a studio. Regards, Ralf _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user