What happens next is entirely up to the plugin. Different plugins do things often exceedingly differently.
All Waveform gives you is a handy guide--for example, in the example I provided in that snippet earlier, the C#1 key causes a note to play staccato. I need to place whatever that note is above the C#1. In some plugins it only works for the duration of the note(s) I draw in at C#1; other plugins treat that as a toggle until I place another note there to "turn off staccato." That's totally up to the plugin, not Waveform.
Also, the use of note colors in Waveform is purely cosmetic: they don't do anything besides add visual clarity. What you're asking for, I think, is unique to FL Studio where a note color can be assigned to channels and events.
All Waveform gives you is a handy guide--for example, in the example I provided in that snippet earlier, the C#1 key causes a note to play staccato. I need to place whatever that note is above the C#1. In some plugins it only works for the duration of the note(s) I draw in at C#1; other plugins treat that as a toggle until I place another note there to "turn off staccato." That's totally up to the plugin, not Waveform.
Also, the use of note colors in Waveform is purely cosmetic: they don't do anything besides add visual clarity. What you're asking for, I think, is unique to FL Studio where a note color can be assigned to channels and events.
Statistics: Posted by Watchful — Sun Feb 11, 2024 2:05 am