Within the waveform overview, the mouse can be used to highlight a portion of the file, which is then shown in more detail in the main waveform area.
The Editor pane dominates, displaying a waveform overview area which shows the full length of the audio file and the main waveform display, where detailed editing is carried out. The upper toolbar strip aside, the main SFPM display is divided into four user-configurable, areas.
Once your editing is done, your beautifully crafted audio can then be rendered in a range of audio formats including MP3, WAV and AIF. As well as applying processors individually to a file, or a selection from a file, users can also build plug-in chains and save them as presets, while effect controls can be automated via envelopes. A sensible selection of processing tools is, likewise, available, as is a range of third-party plug-ins from iZotope and Zplane, and any other VST or AU plug-ins on your system are also available within SFPM. All the usual editing tools - trimming, cutting, pasting, adding fades, and so on - are present and correct. You could, therefore, use SFPM to record or edit anything from the simplest mono sample up to a high-fidelity, multi-channel live recording, and presets for recording common surround channel configurations are included. SFPM supports record tasks of up to 32 channels.Hardware permitting, SFPM supports a wide variety of audio formats, and can record up to 32 simultaneous channels at 64-bit/192kHz resolution.