There are two functions for the glue tool that
enhance its functionality and increase editing speed when you’re
trying to lock together specific sets of events on a track. First,
you can glue multiple events together selectively, which is
useful if, say, one or two bar’s worth of data don’t have the timing you
want but everything else is timed right. In this instance locking the
whole track would be out of the question. Here’s what to do: Highlight
the events you want to join, and then click on one of them with the glue
tool. This creates a single event comprising the items you have
selected, and leaves everything else free to be moved about as normal.

The second function will glue together all events on a track from a
specific point in the timeline onwards. This is useful when you have
several short audio clips scattered along a track and need to lock them
all in time as parts within a single event. To do this hold down the
Alt key (or Option key on a Mac) while clicking with the glue tool on
the event where you want your newly joined-up section to begin. When
you do this everything after that event will now be joined up.
On a long track this would save a major amount of individual gluing
together. |