Yes, that’s what’s meant. Regarding the circumstances, here’s a …
… Test procedure with Cubase 13 (13.0.40):
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1: Start with clean Cubase setup (no user settings)
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2: Create empty project with “Create empty…” button, no workspaces are defined
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3: Create a global workspace “My Workspace 1”
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4: [NOK!] Select this workspace => No workspace indicator shown
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5: Create a 2nd global workspace “My Workspace 2”
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6: [NOK!] Select this workspace => Still no workspace indicator shown
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7: Save project, close and re-open it
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8: [NOK!] Indicator now appears, but showing wrong ID (2 instead of 1, which is active)
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9: [NOK!] Switching between workspaces 1 and 2 doesn’t change indicator display
Furthermore:
Asterisk (*) doesn’t disappear when workspace is updated.
For comparison, same procedure with Cubase 12 (12.0.70):
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1: Start with clean Cubase setup (no user settings)
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2: Create empty project with “Create empty…” button, no workspaces are defined
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3: Create a global workspace “My Workspace 1”
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4: [OK!] Select this workspace => Indicator shows correctly G1
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5: Create a 2nd global workspace “My Workspace 2”
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6: [OK] Select this workspace => Indicator shows correctly G2
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7: Save project, close and re-open it
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8: [OK!] Indicator appears, showing correct ID (1, which is active)
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9: [OK!] Switching between workspaces 1 and 2 changes indicator display correctly
See above.
I’m on Windows 10. The initial report I found was at
The images there also show Windows OS.
The initial report was apparently ignored by Steinberg.