Syndicated.Corpse Posted October 9, 2009 Share Posted October 9, 2009 Is there like a manual/book that teaches the user all the in's and outs of using Reaper? I fiddle yes, but I am more of a analytical person when learning something new. So I like to have a book that I can reference often. Is there such a book? Thanks guys and gals. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
avaris Posted October 9, 2009 Share Posted October 9, 2009 It's on their website: http://www.reaper.fm/userguide.php Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LuketheXjesse Posted October 9, 2009 Share Posted October 9, 2009 We have a tutorial right here in OCR actually. It's how I learned how to use it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moseph Posted October 9, 2009 Share Posted October 9, 2009 We have a tutorial right here in OCR actually. It's how I learned how to use it. EDIT: Never mind, was going to link to it but then realized Luke already did and the link wasn't colored for some reason. EDIT 2: Oh, it's not colored because it's broken -- unbroken version Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LuketheXjesse Posted October 9, 2009 Share Posted October 9, 2009 what the Why is my link completely broken? That is weird. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moseph Posted October 9, 2009 Share Posted October 9, 2009 It seems to point to http://((int)(dollars*100)) % 100/, judging by what the quoted version links to. Did you accidentally not copy the address properly and it pasted what was already in the clipboard? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
big giant circles Posted October 9, 2009 Share Posted October 9, 2009 Luke, I'm not going to get tricked into looking at your porno site again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arcana Posted October 9, 2009 Share Posted October 9, 2009 Someone was programming in Java or C++ recently. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Syndicated.Corpse Posted October 9, 2009 Author Share Posted October 9, 2009 Thanks guys!!! Now, .dll plugins are the sounds and instruments right? And btw, when I try to dl the manual, it will pop up a new screen and freeze or w/e and not dl. Confused @_@ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AMT Posted October 11, 2009 Share Posted October 11, 2009 Hm, does the same thing for me. Try right click > save as on the previous page and open it in the standalone adobe reader, that worked for me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yoozer Posted October 11, 2009 Share Posted October 11, 2009 Thanks guys!!!Now, .dll plugins are the sounds and instruments right? DLL files are the plugins. When a softsynth you've downloaded has only that and no nice setup.exe or something, you can simply copy the DLL file to your plugins folder, and you're done. The "sounds" are something different; "sound" is the wrong term. Rather, use the word "preset" or "patch" (on some hardware synths they're called "programs"). The name "preset" comes from organs; the name "patch" from modular synthesizers where you couldn't store anything in memory; you'd have to shoot a picture of the front panel or write down all the positions of the knobs and all the locations of the patch cables. When you have a plugin such as Synth1, there's no actual file that makes sound. A preset contains all the settings of the knobs, which is just a small list of nubmers. When you have a something like Kontakt, each preset consists of both the settings and a bunch of .wav files. Either of the two alone won't be of much use; you can have a whole stack of samples but the preset gives them the cohesion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Syndicated.Corpse Posted October 13, 2009 Author Share Posted October 13, 2009 DLL files are the plugins. When a softsynth you've downloaded has only that and no nice setup.exe or something, you can simply copy the DLL file to your plugins folder, and you're done.The "sounds" are something different; "sound" is the wrong term. Rather, use the word "preset" or "patch" (on some hardware synths they're called "programs"). The name "preset" comes from organs; the name "patch" from modular synthesizers where you couldn't store anything in memory; you'd have to shoot a picture of the front panel or write down all the positions of the knobs and all the locations of the patch cables. When you have a plugin such as Synth1, there's no actual file that makes sound. A preset contains all the settings of the knobs, which is just a small list of nubmers. When you have a something like Kontakt, each preset consists of both the settings and a bunch of .wav files. Either of the two alone won't be of much use; you can have a whole stack of samples but the preset gives them the cohesion. You've successfuly confused me. Thats complicated @_@ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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