Enablerecording on the track you wish to record and hit record the appropriate Scaler track (i.e. Scaler 2(2), Scaler 2(3), Scaler 2(4)) will feed your VST track and record the instrument track.
NOTE: If you want to play scaler and record at the same time make sure the monitoring is enabled on the scaler track. When you hit record and play the scaler track it will record the track and you will hear what Scaler is feeding the recording track.
Not exactly sure where you might be getting hung up, but this vid might give you a tip or two. I walk through the different Studio One routings using Scaler standalone and with other VSTs. Sorry that the 1st half of the vid does not show the Scaler Drop down menus (capture software issue) but there is nothing contained in those menu selections that has an impact on the setup.
Hope this helps a little. Scaler and S1 are a great combination and imho, worth messing with a bit to get it worked out in your head. I have several templates setup w/Scaler configured in different ways because I can forget some of the setup occasionally.
Ahhh thank you, this worked! I have my main scaler with my chord progression and I dragged in another instance to a new track. I chose sync on my main scaler and then dragged the chords into my DAW. Then on the other instance of Scaler I chose a melody and dragged those in as well. I chose the same instance of Scaler as the instrument output and each played correctly. The next question I have is how can I change the instrument on say the melody track? When I tried changing it, the chord track also changed.
I favor Scaler.
ChordJam is great for randomization.
Scaler makes you a better musician by giving building blocks for songs and allowing you to apply different performance types.
Over time you improve as a player using it.
I find myself thinking in a more musical way since using Scaler.
Both plugins are great, I would say Scaler is more comprehensive.
@Stuntman_mike said:
I favor Scaler.
ChordJam is great for randomization.
Scaler makes you a better musician by giving building blocks for songs and allowing you to apply different performance types.
Over time you improve as a player using it.
I find myself thinking in a more musical way since using Scaler.
Both plugins are great, I would say Scaler is more comprehensive.
If you have scaler 2, buy chord jam. If you don't have scaler 2, buy scaler 2. I have scaler 2, so I bought chord jam, and it's great as part of a generative music setup. But Scaler 2 is simply amazing and I wouldn't want to be without it. I have it on PC and iPad both.
Scaler also lets you capture chord progressions from audio or MIDI. Like the incidental music in a TV show you are watching? Just hit the chord capture button to see what it identifies, use those as your building blocks to arrange a sequence you like and then away you go.
@Angie said:
Scaler also lets you capture chord progressions from audio or MIDI. Like the incidental music in a TV show you are watching? Just hit the chord capture button to see what it identifies, use those as your building blocks to arrange a sequence you like and then away you go.
Also worth mentioning 4Pockets Progressions here, a really deep tool. Like almost all 4Pockets apps there are things that annoy me about the UI / UX, but it is an amazing chord generator nevertheless, and works in a different way to both chordjam and scaler 2
@Gavinski said:
Also worth mentioning 4Pockets Progressions here, a really deep tool. Like almost all 4Pockets apps there are things that annoy me about the UI / UX, but it is an amazing chord generator nevertheless, and works in a different way to both chordjam and scaler 2
Apple Music has music from Torchwood and the newish Dr. Who series. Some lovely chords to play with from those tracks, especially when arranged for totally different music styles. Play a track on the phone and chord harvest in Scaler 2 on iPad.
@Darkstring said:
If you have scaler 2, buy chord jam. If you don't have scaler 2, buy scaler 2. I have scaler 2, so I bought chord jam, and it's great as part of a generative music setup. But Scaler 2 is simply amazing and I wouldn't want to be without it. I have it on PC and iPad both.
I didn't realise, but I already have ChordJam on my iPad, from before my 1 year hiatus away. So I can try it, and see if it's a viable investment to have it on desktop too, whilst it's on offer. Scaler 2, I have downloaded, and I'm confident the full purchase will be a wise investment on both iPadOS and MacOS.
At that point I knew it was time. I had to alert the masses here at home base. How could I convey such an extinction level event? I mean music theory, chorder apps, off key, boring and lifeless harmony and melody would never be the same. Dude.
Like all latest gen Audiomodern apps, it shares a simple, familiar, playable and aesthetically pleasing interface. It can aid in song creation and has a unique approach to finding and sequencing chords.
The Savannah-3 posterior sickle scaler features extra-thin, dual cutting blades effective for removal of light to medium calculus and fits easily in tight contacts and interproximal surfaces. Its razor-sharp blades make it ideal for removal of calculus, excess cement and composite material.
If everything checks, the next step would be to check if you are using scaling anywhere in the parent components of the component you want to get the width and height for, and if the component you want to get the height for has different min max anchors.
Just to be sure: The width and height are for the screen resolution not the element size. If you were using the screen resolution, you can easily check if my formula is correct by taking a look at the canvas root component with the scaler:
thank you very much for you effort but I did find another solution getting the size of the canvas directly and setting up the anchor to the middle so the borderds of the screen are the following -canvas.size.x/2 , canvas.size.y/2 , canvassize.x/2 , -canvas.y/2
Hey there!
So well, depends on what you want to achieve. From what I can tell, I think you want to have the same physical size no matter the device. With that in mind, my answer for "Is there anonther formula without using DPI my answer is no, since the dpi is your only connection between the amount of pixel you have to the actual physical size of a pixel.
The sklearn.preprocessing package provides several commonutility functions and transformer classes to change raw feature vectorsinto a representation that is more suitable for the downstream estimators.
In general, many learning algorithms such as linear models benefit from standardization of the data set(see Importance of Feature Scaling).If some outliers are present in the set, robust scalers or other transformers canbe more appropriate. The behaviors of the different scalers, transformers, andnormalizers on a dataset containing marginal outliers is highlighted inCompare the effect of different scalers on data with outliers.
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