Saving a Template

Ardour 4 Tutorial

Reading time ~3 minutes

If you often go through the motions of setting up the same information in each new Session you create, such as the number of input and output Channels, the number and names of Tracks or Busses, or the Routing, then you may wish to create a Template of that information instead.

With a Template, you can save the state of a currently open Session without all the Region information files. Templates are useful if, for example, you’re doing extensive Routing on Tracks and Buses and want to save the Editor Window’s state for use in other Sessions. An example might be a Template to record Tracks of drums, bass, guitar and vocals, each with their own input on the soundcard, which you might use as a basis for each Session you created in that situation.

Save a Template

You can save a new Template from the Main Menu: Session > Save Template. You are asked to give the new Template a name:

template1

Load a Template

When creating a new Session, you get can now load up a previously saved Template:

template2

In summary: Session Templates are a way to store the setup of a session for future use. They do not store any audio data but can store:

  • The number of tracks and busses, along with their names.
  • The plugins present on each track or bus (if any).
  • All I/O connections.

Conclusion

Congratulations, you have reached the end of this introduction to Ardour! We hope that this tutorial has been useful for you to learn the key functions of Ardour.

In the following section, the Appendices, we have included some extra information we thought would be useful to new users of Ardour, including how to get Further Help, a Glossary of technical terms used in this manual, some Links to further information about Ardour on the Internet and, last but not least, the Credits of those involved in creating this Free/Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) Manual.

Thanks for reading, and if you have some knowledge about Ardour that is not included here, please feel free to propose changes (more info on how to do it: How to Contribute. Also, this manual itself is fully open source and lives at https://github.com/brunoruviaro/ardour4-tutorial. You can even fork it and create your own customized version of it!

Appendices: FURTHER HELP || GLOSSARY || LINKS || CREDITS

About This Tutorial

Published on December 30, 2014

What Is Digital Audio?

Published on December 29, 2014