View Menu

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View Menu has commands that determine the amount of detail you see in all the tracks in the project window. It also lets you show or hide Toolbars and some additional windows such as Undo History.
View menu 3.4.0.png
Audio tracks support different View Modes such as Waveform (the default), Waveform dB or Spectrogram.


Zoom

The Zoom submenu has commands that enable you to control the amount of audio, longer or shorter periods of time, that is visible on your screen.

Track Size

The Track Size submenu contains commands that help you to fit your project to the screen horizontally and vertically.

Skip To

The Skip to submenu has commands that enable you to readily skip the cursor position to the beginning or end of your current selection.

History

Brings up the History window which can then be left open while using Audacity normally.

  • History lists all undoable actions performed in the current project, including importing.
  • The right-hand column shows the amount of hard disk space each operation used.
  • The total space used is shown in the first (uneditable) box beneath the list.
History dialog rollback 3-0-0.png

Select an item in the History list, and click the OK button, to Undo or Redo immediately to that action.

It is the same as choosing Edit > Undo or Edit > Redo multiple times, but much quicker.

See History - Undo and Redo for details on using the Undo History window.

Karaoke

Karaoke shows a bouncing ball that follows text as audio plays. The Karaoke command is enabled whenever you have at least one label track. If you have multiple label tracks, it uses only the first one.

For more details see the Karaoke page.

Mixer

Mixer is an alternative view to the audio tracks in the main tracks window, and is analogous to a hardware mixer board. Each audio track is displayed in a Track Strip. Each Track Strip has its own pair of meters, gain slider, pan slider, and mute/solo buttons, echoing that track's controls in its Track Control Panel. The Mixer command is enabled whenever there's an audio track - it can even be brought up during playback.

For more details see the Mixer page.

Toolbars

Toolbars provide quick access to many functions in Audacity. In some cases the functions provided by a toolbar are available only through that toolbar.

All toolbars are enabled by default except: Device Toolbar, Cut/Copy/Paste Toolbar, Spectral Selection Toolbar and the Scrub Toolbar.

Tip If your desired toolbar is not visible, choose View > Toolbars and click to put a checkmark by the toolbar you wish to enable.

Enable Extra Menus  

Shows the Extra menu with many extra less frequently used commands. This menu appears just before the help menu.


Show track name as overlay

When this is enabled the audio track name is displayed superimposed translucently at top left of all audio tracks. Note that the track name is always shown in the Track Control Panel but will be truncated if the name is too long to fit.

View Menu Show Track Name.png

This has the same effect as the setting for Show track name as overlay in Tracks Preferences.


Show Clipping in Waveform

Click this menu item to turn display of clipped samples on and off - a check mark in the item indicates that display is turned on. If turned on (the default is off), individual or multiple clipped samples display as a red vertical line when in one of the waveform views. A sample is displayed as clipped if it touches or exceeds 0 dB and so touches or exceeds the volume envelope defined by +1.0 to - 1.0 on the vertical scale to left of the waveform.

A run of four or more consecutive clipped samples will also trigger the red clipping indicator in Meter Toolbar. A solid block of red in the waveform will almost certainly indicate multiple or extended runs of lost audio information above 0 dB, resulting in severe distortion. Avoid clipped samples where possible, for example by setting the recording level correctly. You may turn "Show Clipping in Waveform" off if it behaves sluggishly on slower machines.

ShowClipping02.png
Tip By choosing Analyze > Find Clipping, clipping can also be shown diagrammatically in a Label Track so that screen-readers can access the information.


Enter / Exit Full Screen (Mac only)

Enter Full Screen enters full screen state, occupying the entire display and hiding the Audacity menu bar and window buttons and the Dock. This is the same as clicking the green window button top left of the Audacity title bar. To leave Full Screen, hover your mouse at the top of the monitor to show the menu bar and window buttons then access View > Exit Full Screen or click the green window button.

The Mac keyboard shortcut Ctrl + ⌘ + F to toggle full screen does not work in Audacity and so does not appear alongside the Enter / Exit Full Screen menu items. Separate "App Shortcuts" for "Enter Full Screen" and "Exit Full Screen" can be added for Audacity in the Mac Keyboard Preferences, but it is probably easier to use Audacity's own shortcut COMMAND + /   for "Full screen on/off" which performs the same full screen function.

Advice "Full screen on/off" is not interchangeable with the menu item or full screen button. Thus the Audacity shortcut cannot exit full screen entered by other methods, and the other methods cannot exit full screen entered by using the Audacity shortcut.