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Many of the items in Cakewalk.ini are set using SONAR menus and dialog boxes. However, some items can be changed only by using the Edit > Preferences > File - Initialization File command or by directly editing this file using the Windows Notepad.
Cakewalk.ini is divided into different sections. Unless otherwise noted, all entries should appear in the section that starts with the line:
For example, if you want to add the line PanicStrength=1 to Cakewalk.ini, you should put it on the line under [Wincake], like this:
Table 227.  
PauseOnJog=<0 or 1> (default=0; off)
There are two variables that control the behavior of using a control surface jog wheel to change SONAR’s Now time:
JogPosTimer is the period of the now time throttle. When a jog message comes in, SONAR sets the transport time immediately but will not set the transport time again for this length of time. During the time, SONAR just remembers the latest jog time received.
PauseOnJog is the main switch. 1 does a pause and invokes the throttle timer. 0 just sends the now time with no pause and no throttle timer. If 0, the setting of JogPauseTimer is "don't care."
By default, waveform previews take a meter sample for each meter frame. The default interval between meter frames is 40 milliseconds. The WavePreviewSampleFrequency Cakewalk.ini variable lets you specify how frequently samples are taken. The value can be an integer between 1 and 10, and represents the number of frames to sample. It goes in the [Wincake] section of Cakewalk.ini. For example:
With the default value (1), every meter frame gets written to the history file. With higher values (2-10), frames will be skipped, causing fewer history frames to be written to the history file. Higher values may be desirable if the waveform previews are affecting playback performance.
This variable allows control of the number of Waveform preview input buffers. The input buffers allow more efficient access to the recorded meter history on disk, and greatly speeds up performance access to previews while zooming and scrolling the clips view when waveform preview is active. You can control the actual number of history page buffers with this variable. This value is an integer and the minimum value is 1 and the default is 4 buffers. 2-4 buffers should be sufficient for most usage scenarios. Each buffer consumes approx 32K per preview track. Lower values consume less memory but may cause more disk access when scrolling or zooming large projects when preview is active.
This line controls whether the audio waveform is redrawn or not when the display is scrolling during playback. By setting the value to 1, you can force the Track view to always redisplay audio data, even during playback. This is recommended only for very fast machines.
This line specifies whether or not SONAR should jump to the foreground (focus) once it locks to SMPTE.
<installation
directory>\ttshyph.dll
This determines the location of the Hyphenator extension .dll used by SONAR, and is written during installation. This should never need to be changed.
Each StudioWare view remembers a certain maximum number of (Design mode) operations before discarding old ones. This line lets you control the maximum depth of each Panel undo history. Be aware that the larger the number you specify, the more memory must be dedicated to storing the information required to undo commands.
This line controls whether SONAR hides (n=0) or shows (n=1) all widget bitmaps while in Use mode (except those in Image widgets).
The Panic/Reset button stops playback and turns off any stuck notes. There are two ways a MIDI note can be turned off: By a note-off message (n=1) or by MIDI controller number 123 (all notes off). By default, Panic uses controller 123 only (n=0).
This line specifies whether or not SONAR should treat channels assigned to each note as separate voices. This is useful if you want to force note stems up or down for different voices.
By default, Track view controls (widgets) will only appear in the track header bar if the track is minimized and there is enough room to display at least one control.
When TRUE (value=1) widgets stay in the header bar regardless of the height of a track.
Note: the following controls will never appear in the track header bar: Send widgets, meters, and vertical effects bin.
By default, note velocity tails are displayed as 1 pixel wide solid vertical lines in the Piano Roll view. To make the velocity tails wider (2-4 pixels wide), add the following line to Cakewalk.ini in the [WinCake] section:
If you set this to 1, solid velocity tails will become narrower by one pixel if the vertical zoom is such that notes are less than 5 pixels high. For example, with:
you get bigger velocity tails (ala SONAR 4) when the notes are big enough to edit, but really thin velocities tails when the notes are too small to edit.
By default, note velocity tails are displayed as thin vertical lines in the Piano Roll view, and the color is the same as note events. If “Notes/Velocity” is not the current edit type, this color will be slightly lightened.
To override this and use bar graph indicators for velocity tails, add the following line to the [WinCake] section:
When displaying velocity tails as bar graphs (see above), you can specify whether the velocity tails should be fixed at 3 pixels wide (default), or extend the full width of the note event. To display full-width velocity tails, add the following line to the [WinCake] section:
The Piano Roll view and Inline Piano Roll note event colors are based on the track color. By default, note events use a track’s foreground (data) color instead of the background (clip) color.
To override this and use background colors instead, add the following line to the [WinCake] section:
By default, note events in the Piano Roll are colorized based on velocity. Darker colors indicate higher velocityes.
To override this and use the static track color instead, add the following line to the [WinCake] section:
By default, the Microscope mode begins horizontal magnification when a 32nd note is narrower than 8 pixels. This line lets you specify the horizontal zoom threshold (1-20 pixels).
This line specifies the highest horizontal magnification that will result when using Microscope mode.
By default, a drop shadow is not displayed on clips in the Track view. To always display a drop shadow on clips, add this to the [Wincake] section: ShowClipShadow=1
By default, when saving a project file during playback, SONAR saves the file asynchronously while playback continues. While this is not a problem with most projects, complex projects under high CPU load conditions (particularly while running under low latency) may take longer to save than if the transport was not playing.
Setting PauseDuringSave to a value of 1 in the [Wincake] section changes the default behavior and pauses playback temporarily for the duration of the file save. This allows the file save to proceed as fast as possible before playback resumes.
This line specifies how far back (in measures) SONAR should search for long elements in order to display them in the Staff view. If a long element does not start within the specified time, then it will not be displayed in the Staff view (although it will print).
<Windows TEMP
directory>
This line specifies where to store temporary .wav files when launching a third party wave editor from the Utilities menu.
This option enables progressive display of waveform pictures. When enabled you will see pictures being displayed in the clips view dynamically as they are being computed. The waveforms will update in the background when the application is idle. If the ComputePicturesWhilePlaying flag is set to 1, waveforms will continue being displayed progressively even while audio playback is in progress. This can save time waiting for a complete picture to be finished before you can see it.
You may want to increase the value of this Cakewalk.ini variable if you are experiencing sluggish UI responsiveness when using a control surface and playing back high CPU projects.
Also, if you are using a control surface that is not bi-directional, the surface does not need to be refreshed at all and you can safely increase the value.
By default, the AudioSnap palette appears automatically whenever you enable AudioSnap on a clip. If you prefer to never auto-show the AudioSnap palette, you can change this behavior by setting the value to 0.
Global and view toolbars are drawn with a background gradient. If you prefer a flat background, set the value to 0.
TVControlHeight=
<number of pixels>
Specifies the height of controls in the Track view. The value shouldn't be changed more than 1 or 2 from the default value, or you may experience unexpected results.
TVControlWidth=
<number of pixels>
TVControlSpacingX=
<number of pixels>
Specifies the horizontal space, in pixels, between controls in the Track view.
TVControlSpacingY=
<number of pixels>
TVSpacingXInCluster
=<number of pixels>
Specifies the horizontal space between each button in a "cluster". The default value is 2 pixels. The following controls are grouped into clusters:
Specifies whether track/bus names use bold (value=1) or regular (value=0) font style in the Track view.
Specifies the size of track/bus names in the Track view. The default size is large (value=1).
SONAR can write Clip Names with an alpha channel such that the waveform behind the clip name can be seen.
This variable specifies the small track icon size. By default, small icons are 32x32 pixels.
This variable specifies the large track icon size. By default, large icons are 48x48 pixels.
By default, track icons support transparency. The top left pixel in the BMP determines the transparent color. If you prefer to not have transparent icons, set the variable value to 0.
Note: When transparency is enabled, the global color entry (Edit > Preferences > Customization - Colors) called "Track View Icons Background" determines the background color ("Console Strips Icons background" does the same for the Console view and Track Inspector).
This variable specifies how the CPU meter appears in the status bar on multiprocessor systems. The values are as follows:
0 = The peak thread load is displayed as the bar and a yellow indicator shows the average of all audio threads. This the default mode.
1 = The average audio thread load is displayed as the bar and a yellow indicator shows the peak thread.
2 = A bar is shown for each audio thread. This is the same display as previous versions of SONAR.
When you copy and paste clips that belong to a clip group, this variable specifies if the pasted clips should be placed in a new clip group or continue to be grouped with the original clip group. By default, a new clip group is created.
0 = The pasted clips will belong to the same clip group as the clips that were copied.
1 = A new clip group is created for the pasted clips. This is the default behavior.
In SONAR 4.0.2 and earlier, opening the property page of a VST plug-in during playback could result in a slight disruption in playback.
The cause for this problem has its roots in the little Cancel button that sits in the top right corner of the plug-in's property page. The purpose of this button is to allow the user to cancel out of any changes they might have made to the plug-in, restoring back to whatever state the plug-in was in before they opened the GUI window. To make this work, SONAR would need to take an initial snapshot of the plug-in's state, and some plug-ins with large amounts of preset data could cause an audio hiccup if the data was captured for the Cancel button.
To address this issue, SONAR 4.0.3 (and later) does not take a snapshot of the plug-in's state by default, and the Cancel button is not available.
Set the value to 1 to disable font smoothing in SONAR. You must restart SONAR in order for the change to take effect.

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