williamcopper
Oh God .... turns out 'aim assist' differs depending on whether you click slightly to the right or to the left of the center -- of a potentially tiny and imprecisely clickable midi note. Kill me. NOT A GOOD DESIGN.
I should have known the result of answering your question with a perfectly reasonable answer that addressed your issue wouid be serial posts complaining about the implementation, rather than a "thank you."
Long ago I posted this feature request: NO, none not ever, nope, don't do it, no NONE NO zones on midi notes.
Thankfully, Cakewalk had the good sense to ignore it. I can only imagine the nightmare of shortcuts and menu options that would be required to change the functionality of a single mouse click or click and drag compared to deploying selective positional context.
As to "tiny notes," you really should learn how to use zoom. I don't mean the basic zoom you
think you know, but the many options you clearly
don't know. I do tons of work that involve major zoom ins to work on
millisecond and sometimes even individual sample changes to the attacks of audio or MIDI, then immediate major zoom outs to locate the next section that requires close-in zooming. There are many ways to do this.
And if you want
everything bigger, learn how to change your monitor resolution, or use a second monitor with low resolution and park the PRV in there. I often do super-detailed synth programming where I want a bigger
"target" so I can move faster on making fine parameter adjustments...many synths can be difficult to read, so I just park the synth in the secondary monitor with lower resolution while I'm programming.
Best thing that ever happened to me in terms of visuals was getting a 28" touch screen as my primary monitor and setting it up in front of me like a mixer.
CW really needs to buy big monitors for their programmers, so they see how tiny some of the things they program can appear to the users.
Seriously, you don't know what you're talking about. They
use big monitors, I've visited their offices. However, they also know how to use the program.