

In that regard, the workspace is getting closer to VEGAS functionality, and honestly, I do a lot of my sound mixing in Vegas, exporting a WAV to SF for mastering. In that version, the length of your "workspace" is defined by the longest stereo track, and you're able to take shorter bits and manipulate them along the timeline. Where will you move it ~TO~? This is one of the limitations of SF ~prior~ to V9 or V10-I forget which one allows for multitrack recording-and it makes sense. Let's say you have a 5:00 track with 5:00 of sound in it. This is the indicator that you're in the tool that slides audio back and forth. You'll notice the cursor turning into a box with an arrow sticking out of it. When you've got your track(s) selected, click, hold and move back and forth. As an old standby, I usually just click anywhere and ctrl-A. If you click a single track, shift-double-click will allow you to add other tracks to that selection. When you select the whole track, the entire thing highlights in blue, not just the selection across which you dragged. click issues, so.just call it a headscratcher and be done with it. There may be a way to adjust the delay, and SF is the only problem with which I experience double-click vs.

It's almost as if the delay where SF determines if you're clicking or double-clicking is so miniscule that humans can't do it. It seems to respond better when I click fast. If you double click in that sweet spot, BOTH tracks highlight. What I often have trouble with is that there's a sweet spot right around the line that separates the two tracks. You can click and drag to highlight a section of the track, or you can double-click and select the entire track. There are two "modes" you can use to interact with a track.
