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Ardour 4 tutorial3/30/2023 Be careful not to change anything else by mistake. Find the line you want to edit, and type your changes right in. You can now edit the raw text for that file. GitHub will show you a message telling you it created a working copy (“fork”) of the tutorial in your own GitHub account, and you will be editing that copy instead. In the header portion of that page, you will see the icon of a little pencil to the right of the button “History”.If this is your first time, you may want to try the file -dummy-page.md (that page was made just for testing, so no worries of messing it up).Ĭlick on the file name ( -dummy-page.md) to see its content. Go to and find the section you want to edit. Each page is a separate file ending with the extension. All the tutorial text lives inside the _posts folder in the repository (yes, the one starting with an underline character, not just post). Method #2: Editing pages in your browserĪ good way of proposing changes (like fixing a typo or a link) is to edit a page directly from the GitHub website. In order to make suggestions and propose edits, you will need to create a GitHub account. There are many ways to do so, from fixing a small typo to writing whole new sections. Read on Method #2 in the next section if you would like to try. For example, you could edit the page yourself and propose the change (“pull request”) to be included in the published tutorial (“merge”). If you are willing to learn a little bit more about GitHub, you can go beyond just submitting issues. Submitting an issue is the easiest way to contribute: you just post your suggestion or idea and I’ll review and fix the issue as appropriate. In this case, feel free to add a comment to that existing thread, instead of opening a duplicate issue. Perhaps you will find that your idea or suggestion has already been posted by someone else. For example, “In the Recording Audio section…”īefore submitting a new issue, take a look at existing ones. Give it a straightforward title, and describe the issue in details in the comment section.Īlways specify the name of the page (post title) you are referring to. On the right side column, click on “Issues” This can be done directly through your browser nothing else is needed. Method #1: Submit an issueĪn issue can be anything: reporting a typo, a mistake, an outdated passage or making any suggestions for improving the content and structure of the tutorial. The only requirement is you will need to create a GitHub account (it’s free). More info on Jack configuration: (explanation shown using Cadence, but same basic information applies to Setup window in Qjackctl).Thanks for your interest in contributing to this tutorial. Eventually we hope to include an updated version of it in this tutorial). It’s provided here just as a starting point. Please check this page: ( Warning: this page may be outdated. If not yet running, use the “Setup” button to configure JACK, and hit “Start” to start JACK. If using Qjackctl instead, this is how it should look like: More info on Cadence: Using Qjackctl (Linux) If JACK is already running, you will see a window like this: Eventually we hope to include an updated page like that in this tutorial). This page may be of help: ( Warning: details on that page may be outdated. On a Mac, you will need to use JackPilot. If not, you may have to manually start it. If you have a properly configured KXStudio installation, JACK may be already running in the background. On Ubuntu, you may use either Qjackctl or Cadence to start and stop JACK and control its settings. Ardour used to require JACK in order to run, but since version 4.0 this is optional. In a nutshell, JACK is an audio system which manages connections between Ardour and the soundcard of your computer, and between Ardour and other JACK-enabled audio programs on your computer. If you do not plan to use JACK with Ardour, you may skip this section. If you are wondering just what on earth JACK is then take a look here. But you may want to have JACK available so that Ardour can share audio and MIDI with other Linux audio applications. Ardour 4.X no longer requires that you have JACK (the JACK Audio Connection Kit) installed on your system.
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