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Take Shortcuts! Publicado por Laurie Knapp en noviembre 29th, 2023

by Chris Hulsether

If you like to use your keyboard to hit a button or two and get where you want to go, you’re in luck! MusicMaster has all sorts of ways to help you whip through your database quickly and efficiently using your keyboard.

In this article, I will go over the many ways to use keyboard shortcuts. We have basic default keyboard shortcuts that can be used in your Library Maintenance, Schedule Editor, and more. Also, I’ll show you how to turn on and use our Hotkey Emulator, which will bring shortcuts you may have used before with other music scheduling systems. We also have a way to add your own customized hotkeys.

MusicMaster Shortcuts

For reference, you can print off the list of all the shortcuts we have in the software. Go to Help/Index and search “Shortcuts”.

Then click Print and print to paper or PDF and save it where you want.

Here are some helpful shortcuts you can use in Library Maintenance:

For example, you can hit F6 to view your History Graph and review how a song has scheduled throughout the weeks. When you need more room to review other songs in your library, hit F6 again and the graph closes.

F7 allows you to Mark a song. Typically, it’s marked in powder blue. You can mark songs for reference or use this to perform batch operations on all marked songs. If you right-click on your library grid to open the context menu, you’ll see options available for marked songs, such as Move, Copy, Delete, Merge, and Print.

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Hit ALT+ F7 and the marking song utilities will open.

If you have a bunch of marked songs, SHIFT+F7 will jump to the next marked song.

You can also open the library query window with CTRL+Q to search your library for specific things. Whatever field you are in when you hit CTRL+Q will become the search filter. For example, if you are in your Artist Keyword column and hit CTRL+Q on a song, the query window will already be set to search Artist Keywords.

Heading over to the Rule Tree, you can use CTRL+W to open the Rule Tree Wizard and see recommendations for changes. (Learn about the Rule Tree Wizard here).

In the Schedule Editor, you can use F5 on two songs to swap them. Select the first song you want to move, hit F5, and you will see a red mark on the left side. Then select the other song you want to swap with and hit F5 again. The two songs will swap positions.

If you want to have more space to see your log and you have the History Graph and InfoBar open, you can toggle them on and off with F6 for the History Graph and F11 for the InfoBar.

If you have rule failures or unscheduled positions as a result, you can use shortcuts to jump to each so you can replace the song. Hit CTRL+N to go to the next rule failure and Ctrl+P to go back to the previous rule failure.

HotKey Emulator

How about those Hotkeys you used to use in other software and still have the muscle memory for?

Go to Tools/Options/Additional Options:

Change Hotkey Emulation to a 1 and these shortcuts will be turned on.

These hot keys will work on any non-editable field in the Editor. It changes nothing when you are in an editable field like Artist or Title. These functions are available:

1 – Search for songs where the Auto Match field matches the current song

2 – Search for songs where the Auto Match field matches the previous song

4 – Open the Vicinity Viewer

A – This requires the Additional Properties, AutoMatchField to be set to the Field ID of the keyword you wish to use. With the history graph then open, pressing “A” will change the graph to show the keyword display.

G – Select a song from a saved song list, where it first opens a box allowing you to select a saved list.

J – Swap songs

K – Load songs from the category of the current song into the replacement song window

O – Undo

Q – The Q Filter pops up a list of song attribute codes to search for

S – Schedule from selected category where a pop up lists the categories and the songs from that category

U – Unschedule the active element

X – Toggle the Element Mask to show/hide music and non-music elements

Y – Opens the Yesterday Window (the MusicMaster Schedule Review showing the log from the previous day)

Custom Key Mapping

This is where you can add some customization to your Shortcuts. It’s available both in the Library and Schedule Editor.

Let’s look at how to set this up in Library. Open your Library Maintenance, then go to the menu bar and click on Library > Key Mapping.

Now, you can add shortcut keystrokes to use while you go through your library.

Select the key you want. I selected ALT+1 for layout editor. This allows me to pull up the grid layout editor and add/remove things from my library grid. You can set one for saving your changes or loading a different layout.

You can do the same to bring up things like the Attribute editor, Keyword editor, the Mass Changer and many other tools.

In the Schedule Editor, you can do the same. Shortcut options include various audio playback controls, replacement song functions, history snapshots, publishing to automation, navigating within your logs, toggling between layouts, and so much more!

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Today more than ever, you need ways to take a shortcut and get more out of your database in less time. Contact your Music Scheduling Consultant for assistance.

Clicking (the “Right” Way) Publicado por Laurie Knapp en junio 28th, 2023

By Dave Tyler

MusicMaster is a powerful and robust software, we all know that! But did you know there are many different ways of using it? I am always looking for ways to accomplish something in fewer clicks. Before you call me lazy, let me redirect by saying I am an efficiency junkie. I have been involved in the martial arts for 40 years and efficiency is paramount in successful technique. To bring this back around to music, Elvis really was a Black Belt and studied with an incredible American Kenpo master named Ed Parker who frequently used the term “Economy of Motion” to describe the process of optimal form to gain speed and power. This Economy of Motion is built into MusicMaster too!

I have said many times there are many ways to just about everything in MusicMaster, and for me at least, the “Right Click” is my secret weapon to quickly getting where I want to be in the software. Let’s take a look at what I mean.

The Info Bar

This is the place where all of our categories live and are arranged. Did you know you can right click here to pull up a variety of destinations?

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This box allows you to do multiple things like see the properties of the category you clicked on or create a new category, delete a category, open the Category Editor, and edit or create Category Groups. You can also get to these locations by going to Dataset/Library/Categories. There are also options to check out Schedule Properties and the Schedule Order. The right click in my opinion is the fastest way to do this, but you can also still go to Dataset/Schedule and then choose Schedule Properties or Order too. Cool huh?

Library Maintenance Grid

Let’s open a category(s) in Library Maintenance. Right click on the header of any field and look at the array of options you have!

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You have the powerful Mass Changer at your fingertips which allows you to mass change all sorts of things from adding/deleting/changing values to converting text to mixed case, etc. It is recommended that any time you choose to use the Mass Changer you make a backup of your database first in case you do not get the desired result. There is more info on the Mass changer in this blog article: https://musicmaster.com/?p=95

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You can also choose the incredible Library Analysis feature here. Depending on what field you right clicked on, you will see an analysis of that field. In my example below I am looking at the Artist field and it is easy to see which artists have the most songs in the library.

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Again depending on which field header you are right clicking on, you will get different information. If you clicked on your Role/Gender field you would see the percentage of Male and Female artists (as long as that field is populated) or perhaps right clicking on your Sound Code, you could see the percentage of Rock, Urban or Acoustic songs you have or any other custom codes. My colleague Brian Wheeler wrote a great blog on this topic and you can find it here: https://musicmaster.com/?p=7268.

Clock Editor

If you are building or editing a clock, a right click gives you the same options as some of the buttons above do by allowing you to Insert, Clone or Delete an element.

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Rule Tree

This right click mania doesn’t stop there. Open your Rule Tree and you will find one of the most important right clicks in the program: Rule Tree Properties!

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This special box allows you to bypass the rules in your All-Category folders so they won’t apply to certain categories. Why would you do this? Well you probably don’t want or need Artist Separation and Sound Code rules etc. to be performed on your non-music categories (Jingles, Imaging etc.) and if you schedule Christmas music during the season, you may want to bypass your Christmas categories because the regular rules might be too difficult to satisfy. You can then add just the rules you need in those specific category folders. Good stuff!!

Schedule Calendar

If you open your scheduling calendar and right click, you get some quick options that you may find useful.

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Schedule Editor

Jump into the Schedule Editor, and if you right click on the Hour Header, you get several options including the ability to insert, delete and unschedule an element. There are also two unique options including the ability to lock the hour to prevent any further editing of that hour, or you can pick to view the format clock for that hour (You can also do this by double clicking on the hour header as well).

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If you right click on an element (song, imaging, etc.) within the hour, you will see the same Insert, Delete and Unschedule options from the clock box, but here again are a couple options unique to this right click.

The first is the Scheduling Recap, which shows you the process MusicMaster went through based on your Rules, Optimum Goals, etc. to schedule each position in your log. The second is the “Audio” option which is awesome! Did you know you can listen to songs in the Schedule Editor or even Scope hours (listening to intros and segues)? This is a great way to listen to your log and see if it sounds as great as you think it does. In order for this to work you do need to set up and link your song cards to your audio, but don’t fret, here is a link to the step-by-step process to do just that: https://musicmaster.com/?p=3486.

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Turnover Analysi

Let’s move to Turnover Analysis. This ridiculously powerful area of MusicMaster is chock full of great information on how your categories work, but there is more to it than just what you see. Right click anywhere in the grid and you will see all of the fields available to put in your view. Checkmark a field and it is added.

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Want more information on the power of understanding Turnover Analysis? Check out this in-depth blog: https://musicmaster.com/?p=7832

These are some of the cool “Right Clicks” in MusicMaster that can help you manage your database, and control and create great Radio and TV. Just when you thought you knew it all, right?

Use the Info Bar next time you’re building clocks! Publicado por Brian Wheeler en septiembre 23rd, 2019

By Brian Wheeler

Building clocks is a task that most MusicMaster users visit infrequently. Many users will create a set of clocks and use them for long periods of time with little, if any, change. Other users may require more frequent changes but may not feel very efficient in this process. Are you maximizing the tools at your disposal?

There are many features in MusicMaster that make clock building and tweaking easier, but for now I’m going to focus on the Info Bar. The Info Bar is typically docked on the left side of your MusicMaster program if you have it visible at all. If you don’t have it visible, you can go to View, then select Info Bar to see all that the Info Bar has to offer.

The first thing you’ll likely notice is the list of your music and non-music categories from top to bottom. Not only can you click on these categories to get a quick view of each category’s contents, but you can also drag these categories into a clock that you are building. You can drag and drop an entire hour’s worth of music in a matter of seconds using the Info Bar.

You can also drag in lognotes. those commands for your playback system that you so carefully typed into your clocks are all retained under the clock tab at the bottom of the Info Bar. Click on the Clock tab, then select the ‘Lognotes’ header. There is your entire list of carefully created lognotes. You can drag and drop those into your clocks, too! No sense in having to type them all out again.

Also note in Version 7, the new Elements Tab in your InfoBar allows you to drag clock elements directly into place.

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Using these tools, plus other great tools like the ‘clone’ feature in the clocks (use the toolbar or context menu option) can make the arduous task of creating or modifying clocks into a breeze.

If you’d like more tips and tricks to minimize your clock building/rebuilding time, give your MusicMaster Scheduling Consultant a call and we’ll be happy to show you all kinds of time-saving features.

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Entrada De Campo Directo Durante La Edición De Registros Publicado por Jesus Rodriguez en julio 29th, 2013

Por Paul Ziino

A veces sólo sabe lo que quiere jugar, pero desplazarse por la lista de canciones de recambio parece como pérdida de tiempo. En MusicMaster valoramos su tiempo, así que tenemos muchas formas de acelerar este proceso. El uso directo de campo de entrada cuando se edita la voluntad le permite perforar hasta tanto la canción específica que desee o por lo menos, hacer la lista significativamente menor. Una nota rápida: Qué vamos a describir mayo parecen están cambiando la información de una canción. No te preocupes, las opciones que estamos describiendo sólo ayudar a programa Editor búsquedas y no afectan los datos de sus tarjetas de la canción. Ahora, vamos a acelerar su edición!

Desea reemplazar la canción con un tema específico, digamos “Saltar”. Haga clic una vez en el campo Título y escribe en salto y presiona Enter. MusicMaster programará esa canción específica!

En lugar de programar una canción específica, desea que todas las canciones que comienzan con “Salto”. Que podríamos escribir en “Salto…” y recibirá todas las canciones que comienzan con salto, incluyendo “Saltar”

Puede utilizar el doble de puntos de un comodín en frente de una frase de “extremos”, después de una frase de “comienza con” o en ambos lados de una frase de “contiene”.

AMOR… ¿”El amor es una batalla”, “Choza de amor”.
..AMOR  “No se puede tener prisa Amor”, “El poder del amor”
..AMOR… ¿todas esas opciones más “Usted dar amor un mal nombre” y “Amor”.

Esta es la misma técnica que se utiliza en el campo Artista.

JOHN.. resulta John Lennon, John Mellencamp, y John Mayer.
..JOHN  resulta Elton John and Dr. John.
..JOHN..  resulta los artistas mencionados anteriormente más Jack Johnson.

Si siempre desea utilizar la opción “contiene”, incluso podemos fijar el programa por lo que nunca tienes que escribir los puntos dobles. Ir a herramientas, opciones, propiedades adicionales y la sección de programación. Ir a la opción “Contiene por defecto” y a “1”. Ahora, simplemente escriba “John” en el campo de la artista y conseguir a todos los artistas mencionados.

Esta característica no está limitado a Artista y Título. Campo de entrada directa puede ser utilizado en un número de diferentes campos de la misma manera.

Puede utilizar la entrada directa del campo en el campo de tiempo de ejecución para conseguir una canción que es exactamente la longitud que desee — tipo justo en el tiempo de ejecución deseado en el formato mm: SS, presionar [Enter] y la lista resultante será canciones en sus datos que coincidan con esa longitud. Tiempo de ejecución está siempre en modo de “iguales”, los comodines no hará nada en este campo.

Añada que sus campos de codificación en su Redactor del Horario diseñan y usan la entrada de campaña directa para encontrar canciones que contienen un código específico. Los naipes salvajes no se aplican a la codificación de campos, faltan a “un contiene” el modo. Así pues, si escribe a máquina un D en el campo Sano y prensa [Entran], mostrará todas las canciones que contienen el código del sonido de D. Si escribe a máquina unos 3 y [Entra] en el campo del Ritmo, mostrará todas las canciones que tienen unos 3 en todas partes en ese campo.

Entrada de campo directo puede utilizarse también como una forma rápida de cambiar la categoría que desee programada en una posición específica. Simplemente teclee el código de la categoría deseada en el campo de categoría en el Editor de programación, presione [Enter] y lista de dicha categoría de reemplazo surgirán canciones. Los comodines no funcionan en categoría tampoco — está siempre en modo de “iguales” — tan escribiendo A y [Enter] conseguirá canciones en la categoría.

A propósito, la entrada de campaña directa trabaja en posiciones no programadas menos mal que hace en posiciones ya previstas que desea cambiar.

Entrada de campo directo puede realmente ayudar a acelerar el proceso de edición. Si tienes preguntas sobre este o cualquier otro tema, llame a su consultor de programación de música o correo electrónico support@musicmaster.com para obtener ayuda.

Copiar Música Entre Bases De Datos Publicado por Jesus Rodriguez en febrero 25th, 2013

By Paul Ziino

Si usted es el responsable de más de una base MusicMaster, en ocasiones, es posible que tenga que agregar la misma canción a varias bases de datos. ¿Por qué ir a través de la labor de escribir todos los datos que más y más cuando sólo puede copiar y pegar entre bases de datos?

Abra su primera base de datos y escriba la información de la canción en la vista de cuadrícula.

Haga clic en el recuadro gris puntero a la izquierda de la canción para seleccionar la canción de los datos presentes en la biblioteca vista de cuadrícula. Presione Ctrl+C para copiar la información en el portapapeles.

Abra la segunda base y añadir una canción a ella. Utilizando el mostrar/ocultar campos icono, asegúrese de que sus campos en la vista de cuadrícula línea de izquierda a derecha con los campos de la base de datos original. Esto es importante por lo que no pegar datos en los campos equivocados. Haga clic en la primera celda y pulse Ctrl+V para pegar en el portapapeles. Ahora ha agregado la canción en una segunda base!

Puede copiar cualquier campo de una base de datos MusicMaster, sin embargo algunos campos no son editables para el usuarios y no aceptará pega datos. Esos campos incluyen el identificador de la canción, no-música, paquete, agregar fecha, fecha de editar, mover fecha, categoría juega, biblioteca juega, rendimiento y Simulcast.

Nota: se pueden pegar datos en un atributo o campo de Dayparting, pero si aún no se ha definido el texto estará presente sin definiciones.

Puede copiar y pegar desde MusicMaster a un documento, el correo electrónico o la hoja de cálculo con las mismas funciones de Ctrl-C y Ctrl-V.

Es tan fácil copiar datos de una hoja de cálculo y pegar en MusicMaster. Agregue el número apropiado de nuevas canciones a la biblioteca de MusicMaster, luego seleccionar y copiar todas las celdas correspondientes en la hoja de cálculo, alinee los campos en la MusicMaster para que coincida con las columnas de la hoja de cálculo y, a continuación, Ctrl-V en la primera celda de MusicMaster para pegar todos los datos copiados.

Copiar/pegar puede ahorrar mucho tiempo al hacer la entrada de datos. Por supuesto, siempre es prudente hacer un backup de su base de datos antes de realizar cambios, por si acaso! Si usted tiene alguna pregunta, póngase en contacto con su Consultor de programación de música.

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Schedule Editor Wild Cards Publicado por Joseph Knapp en abril 26th, 2010

By Paul Ziino

When you are in the Schedule Editor, you can tell MusicMaster exactly what song you want to plot in any given position (más…)