Skip to content

Projects

A project is your Silverdaw work: the tracks, clips, effects, and settings that make up a mix. This page covers creating, saving, and managing projects.

Creating and opening projects

From the File menu (or the startup screen) you can:

  • New Project (Ctrl+N) — start a fresh, empty project.
  • Open Project… (Ctrl+O) — open a project you saved before.
  • Recent Projects — reopen a project you worked on recently, or clear the list with Clear Recent Projects.

Saving

  • Save (Ctrl+S) — save your changes.
  • Save As… (Ctrl+Shift+S) — save a copy under a new name.

Project properties

Open File ▸ Project Properties… to view and set details for the current project:

The Project Properties dialog

Screenshot placeholder — replace with: the Project Properties dialog, showing the Project name, Tempo (BPM), Project duration, Sample rate, Bar counter start, and Audio device / Audio driver fields.

  • Project name — the name of the project.
  • Tempo (BPM) — the project's tempo, which the grid, metronome, and tempo-matching all follow.
  • Project duration — the overall length, entered as mm:ss or h:mm:ss.
  • Sample rate — the audio rate for the project (44.1 or 48 kHz). Imports are checked against this and offer a clear path if they differ.
  • Bar counter start — the number the first bar is labelled with. This starts at 1 by default, and can be set to 0 or lower to leave lead-in bars before bar one (handy for clips with a silent intro).
  • Audio device and Audio driver — an optional output device just for this project, applied every time it loads. Choosing Use Application Settings clears the override so the global Preferences ▸ Audio device is used instead.

Portable projects

When you save a project, Silverdaw nests it in its own folder and keeps its generated stems and samples beside the project file. That means you can move or sync the whole folder between machines — for example through cloud storage — and still open it, as long as the original imported source files are still available at the same location.

If you have moved or renamed those source files, you can point Silverdaw back at them using Relink (see below).

Relinking moved files

If a project can no longer find an imported source file — because it was moved or renamed — Silverdaw lets you relink it, reconnecting the project to the file in one step so playback and editing continue as before.

Autosave and crash recovery

Silverdaw quietly snapshots your work in the background as you go. If the application closes unexpectedly, it offers your recovered work back to you the next time you open it, so you don't lose your progress.

Undo and redo

Every edit can be reversed. Use Edit ▸ Undo (Ctrl+Z) and Edit ▸ Redo (Ctrl+Y) to step back and forward through your changes.

Guide for Silverdaw v1.0.1 · Silverdaw is released under the GNU AGPL v3.0.