![]() It can be easy to lose your bearings and anyway it’s quicker to zoom out, find the section you wish to look at, and zoom in on that. When editing it’s often easier to zoom in, edit, then zoom out again rather than zoom in and scroll the screen from side to side. Both are painfully slow in my opinion and while R and T and zoom presets are alternatives, the CMD + square brackets shortcut is always available and you don't need to know about Command Focus settings to use them. There are many ways to zoom horizontally but I start with CMD + square brackets to get people away from using the Zoom Tool and the +/- buttons at the bottom right of the Edit window. In my opinion, this is the most important shortcut in Pro Tools after the spacebar. Try fullscreen Mix and Edit windows and CMD + =. I'm sure this is because of the small screens I started on but I've found it’s still a logical way to work although I know some people prefer staying in the Edit window or using multiple monitors. I prefer to work with both the Edit and Mix windows full screen with no IO, inserts or sends in the Edit window to maximize the available space for the timeline. One thing which impressed me straight away was that I was always working in one of two windows and I could use CMD + = (Ctrl+= on Windows) to switch between them. When I started using Pro Tools I was using a 14" CRT monitor at 800 x 600 resolution (it sounds tiny now but it was a lot bigger than the LCD on an Akai sampler…). We have shown the Mac shortcuts here but Windows users should substitute CMD (⌘) for Control, Opt for Alt, and Ctrl for Start. ⌘⌥⌃↑ or ↓ - Vertically fit all tracks to screen ⌥F - Zoom in to fill the screen with current edit selection (horizontal zoom) ⌥A - Zoom out to show the entire session (horizontal zoom) ![]() If each one saves you as little as a second each time you use it, they will save you hours cumulatively. These five shortcuts are for things you will do every session. ![]() I am a self-confessed shortcut nerd but have always maintained that there is no point learning a shortcut unless it is for something you do a lot. Of course, it takes more in reality, but these five are enough to dramatically speed up your navigation of the Edit window in Pro Tools. To get the attention of people with no prior experience of Pro Tools I have been known to tell people that I can teach them Pro Tools in five shortcuts. ![]()
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