Difference between revisions of "Standards and Conventions"
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{{intro|1= Audacity aims to follow recognized standards and conventions whenever applicable. This includes the choice of terminology (see: [[Wording]]), Human interface guidelines, format specifications, and platform specific conventions. For various reasons, Audacity sometimes diverges from accepted norms. This page is for tracking known issues where Audacity contravenes accepted standards. | {{intro|1= Audacity aims to follow recognized standards and conventions whenever applicable. This includes the choice of terminology (see: [[Wording]]), Human interface guidelines, format specifications, and platform specific conventions. For various reasons, Audacity sometimes diverges from accepted norms. This page is for tracking known issues where Audacity contravenes accepted standards. | ||
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Latest revision as of 10:49, 3 September 2021
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This page has been deprecated. |
The information on this page are likely out-of-date and will not be updated in the forseeable future. It may be removed at any time. |
Audacity aims to follow recognized standards and conventions whenever applicable. This includes the choice of terminology (see: Wording), Human interface guidelines, format specifications, and platform specific conventions. For various reasons, Audacity sometimes diverges from accepted norms. This page is for tracking known issues where Audacity contravenes accepted standards.
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Human Interface Guidelines
There are multiple "Human Interface Guidelines" (HIGs) for Desktop applications, and by and large they agree with each other:
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Right Click Behavior
Reference: Microsoft HIG.
Microsoft and Apple (and may others) have GUI design guidelines that specify that right-click gestures should normally be reserved for a context menu or null.
Date Logged: 16Mar20
Occurances of Non-Standard Behavior:
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Right click&drag to resize track height.
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Right click&drag to resize relative channel sizes in a stereo track
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Right click&drag to resize relative sizes in a Multi-view.
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Right click&drag to reposition the pinned play head in the Timeline
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Right click&drag to set the sliders in Mixer Toolbar
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Right click&drag to set the slider in Play-at-Speed Toolbar
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Right click&drag to set the slider in Mixer Board
Amplitude Scale and Gain
Reference: Standard practice in audio software is to use dBFS for amplitude, and dB for gain.
Date Logged: 16Mar20
Description: Audacity is inconsistent in it's representation of amplitude, sometimes using dBFS (like the rest of the audio world) and sometimes using a linear scale of +/- 1. It is particularly confusing that Audacity's shipped generators use a linear scale of 0 to 1, and Audacity's shipped effects use dB.
Occurances of Non-Standard Behavior:
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Track vertical ruler in "Waveform" view
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Chirp
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DTMF Tones
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Noise
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Risset Drum
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Tone