28-09-21, 20:08 -
Hi Sur,
Well, yes but in another way as you outlined.
Using the webgui notemapping screen you can assign (output)notes to keys=pads. If not saved it sticks until changing sample set (or reboot). If saved, the setting is permanent permanent until remapped again.
You can have several notemaps within a sample set - so you can create multiple presets.
So instead of holding the pad, you select the (input)note (assigned to the pad) to the desired output note. Both are dropdowns.
You can give the pad a name in keynotes.csv to make life easier.
When you've chosen the note you want play, you can hit the pad to hear the sound.
There is no way to give the output note (=the sound) a name, so in that respect it's either remembering which note is linked to what sound or just try via "select-hit", a bit similar but slower than your method.
Hope this helps, Noek
Well, yes but in another way as you outlined.
Using the webgui notemapping screen you can assign (output)notes to keys=pads. If not saved it sticks until changing sample set (or reboot). If saved, the setting is permanent permanent until remapped again.
You can have several notemaps within a sample set - so you can create multiple presets.
So instead of holding the pad, you select the (input)note (assigned to the pad) to the desired output note. Both are dropdowns.
You can give the pad a name in keynotes.csv to make life easier.
When you've chosen the note you want play, you can hit the pad to hear the sound.
There is no way to give the output note (=the sound) a name, so in that respect it's either remembering which note is linked to what sound or just try via "select-hit", a bit similar but slower than your method.
Hope this helps, Noek