Exporting only exports the bus outputs. For mixing, in Qtractor, we use aux sends because Qtractor can't directly connect buses.
For mixing, we don't use bus outputs, but rather aux sends.
Therefore, it will always be impossible to export a mix with the current exporter design.
Exporting only works for exporting specific buses, not mixes.
You can export multiple buses at once, but there's never a guarantee of clipping, because to have that guarantee, you must mix the signals on a master bus with a limiter. Here, the master bus would just be another bus that adds another signal; it doesn't concentrate them.
The exporter doesn't concentrate signals, it doesn't mix them; it only sums all the buses. It doesn't take into account the aux sends (which are what we mix), but rather the bus outputs (which we don't use for mixing and which don't correspond to the aux send signals).
The only way to export a mix is to record the master output audio in real time.
Exporting only exports the bus outputs. For mixing, in Qtractor, we use aux sends because Qtractor can't directly connect buses.
For mixing, we don't use bus outputs, but rather aux sends.
Therefore, it will always be impossible to export a mix with the current exporter design.
Exporting only works for exporting specific buses, not mixes.
You can export multiple buses at once, but there's never a guarantee of clipping, because to have that guarantee, you must mix the signals on a master bus with a limiter. Here, the master bus would just be another bus that adds another signal; it doesn't concentrate them.
The exporter doesn't concentrate signals, it doesn't mix them; it only sums all the buses. It doesn't take into account the aux sends (which are what we mix), but rather the bus outputs (which we don't use for mixing and which don't correspond to the aux send signals).
The only way to export a mix is to record the master output audio in real time.