Hi since upgrading to cubase 14 it seems we can no longer increase or decrease the ‘Track Delay’ vlaue in miliseconds or other value using the keyboard arrows. Is this broken for anyone else?
Surely they don’t expect us to manually type in values one at a time, dozens of them, until we reach the required delay that phases out two separate audio tracks for instance.
I have requested a feature in the past to be able to alter the track delay value of all selected tracks simultaneously by manually typing in the figure and making sure those tracks you want to affect are selected. But you can only do one at a time (affecting the track you selected last only).
I am having to revert to version 13 as I use this feature all the time. I’ve kept version 12 installed, since this still allows fine adjustments in 0.01ms increasements before the bug.
Noted. I really hope they fix this issue asap! I miss using the arrow up key to fly through the values fast and precisely as in Cubase 12 and every version that preceded it.
I can’t belive they have left it broke like this for almost 2 years
With Cubase 13 Steinberg changed the underlying framework of dialogs, GUI elements where keystrokes are entered, and so on. Unfortunately their new version leaves a lot to be desired.
One of the symptoms is the cursor key support on track delay, another would be missing cursor key support in e.g. the Do you want to save the project dialog.
They fixed some of the shortcomings but not all yet. And it seems we, as customers, have to complain about every single item, instead of one of their guys getting all user-interaction elements working nicely in one go.
I personally don’t care about the track delay as I rarely use it, but the whole mix console could be controlled with loads of key commands in C12. All of that is gone in C14…
I agree, so many key commands no longer working. The whole inspector is badly designed, when you double click any ‘EQ band’ to type in a value, the digit box jumps to center with tiny little font no one can hardly read, what the hell? The whole thing leaves a lot to be desired.