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The Wwise interface is divided into several different views. Each view has a specific purpose and gives you access to a series of tools or options that help you manage and define the content for your game. Views are grouped together to create layouts, which facilitate the work involved for a particular task or job. There are different layouts available in Wwise. Refer to Working with layouts for more information.
At the top of each layout is the menu bar and toolbar. The menu bar gives you access to all basic information, such as the project name, and commands, such as: saving projects, changing layouts, opening views, and opening help entries for properties. The toolbar provides quick access to certain tools, such as the Platform or Language Selectors, the Capture tools, the Remote Platform Connector, and the Search tool.
The following figure provides a detailed view of the menu bar:
The following figure provides a detailed view of the left side of the toolbar:
The following figure provides a detailed view of the right side of the toolbar:
When you first start Wwise, the Designer layout is displayed.
It consists of the following views:
Project Explorer: The main area where you manage and organize the various elements of your Wwise project. See Getting to know the Project Explorer. The Project Explorer contains the following tabs:
Audio: A hierarchical tree view, much like Windows Explorer and Mac Finder, where you can organize the assets in your project. The Audio tab has four main hierarchies: Audio Devices, the Master-Mixer Hierarchy, the Actor-Mixer Hierarchy, and the Interactive Music Hierarchy.
Events: Displays the Events, both Action and Dialogue Events, in your project.
SoundBanks: Displays all the SoundBanks in your project.
Game Syncs: Displays all the Switches, States, Game Parameters, and Triggers in your project.
ShareSets: Displays all the Effect and Attenuation ShareSets in your project.
Sessions: Displays all the Soundcaster sessions in your project.
Queries: Displays all the Queries in your project.
Contextual Help view: Provides information on properties selected anywhere in the Wwise user interface as well as details on error messages selected in the Capture Log. Refer to Contextual Help for more information.
Object Tab Group: Contains zero or many Object Tabs depending on your selections. Any object in Wwise can be displayed in an Object Tab, which automatically adapts to the characteristics of the object. Each Object Tab provides easy access to all of the editors that are most relevant to the object, providing a central location where you can define the characteristics and behaviors of the objects within your sound, music, or bus structures. See Working with Object Tabs and Object Tab Groups.
Transport Control: Plays back your objects. The Transport Control contains the traditional controls associated with the playback of audio, such as play, stop, and pause. See Getting to know the Transport Control.
Meter view: Displays color-coded values per channel of three different kinds of levels, namely Peak, True Peak, and RMS. For ambisonic busses, the Meter view can also display the 3D Meter, which shows directional data.
Most of the views in Wwise contain text boxes in which you can type property values or specific information about an object. The name of the text box identifies the type of information the field represents. Depending on the view, the name of the text box could be beside, above, or below it.
Text box name. | |
Property value. |
You can copy text from a text box by right-clicking the text and selecting Copy. When text is displayed in a text box but can't be edited, it is unavailable.
If you want to return a property value to its default setting, Ctrl+click in the text box.
Most of the text boxes that contain property values also have a horizontal slider underneath them. You can drag the slider to set the value in the text box from a continuous range of possible values.
Horizontal sliders contain a slider head and a slider bar. The slider head is a small point that represents the current property value. The slider bar represents how much or how little the current value represents within the range of possible values.
Slider bar. | |
Slider head. |
The slider head appears in different locations along the slider depending on where the default value falls within the range of possible values for each property. The slider bar also starts in different locations and moves in different directions depending on where the default value falls within the range of possible values for each property.
Note | |
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Some sliders have a default slider range that is only a subset of the full range of the property. To access a greater range of values for a particular property, enter a value in the text box outside the default slider range. To view the "default slider range" and full "range" for each property, refer to the Contextual Help for that property or the reference topic for the related view. |
When you click and hold anywhere in the text box, the super slider appears, which makes it easier for you to fine-tune the property value. When you release the mouse button, the larger slider disappears. If you need to define the value more precisely, you can Shift+drag the slider to increase or decrease the value in smaller increments.
Click and hold anywhere in the text box to display the super slider and then drag to change the property value. |
There are two types of lists in Wwise: a drop-down list and a shortcut list (sometimes called a contextual or context list). The drop-down list, referred to simply as a "list" in this help documentation, is a field that contains a series of pre-defined options. To display the list, click the arrow to the right of the field.
Click the arrow to display the list of options. |
The selector button (>>) displays a series of options or actions. The shortcut menu may or may not have a field associated with it to display the option selected. Click the button to display the menu options.
Click the selector button to display the list of options. |
Some properties, such as Volume, use vertical sliders or faders instead of horizontal sliders to change their values. The controls for Volume use vertical sliders to better simulate faders that are found on both hardware and software mixers. You can drag the fader up or down to increase or decrease these property values. If you need to define the value more precisely, you can Shift+click above or below the fader to increase or decrease the value in smaller increments.
Drag the faders up or down to change the property values. Ctrl+click anywhere on the slider or within a text box to restore the property's default value. | |
Text box: You can type values here. |
You can use the cursor keys to navigate cells in a table. In most cases, you can also configure columns, resize columns, sort rows by a column, and edit property values in a table.
To configure columns in a table:
In most tables you can configure the display of columns with the Configure Columns dialog.
Right-click the table header and select Configure Columns.
The Configure Columns dialog appears, where you can specify which columns to display and their order.
Configure Columns dialog | |
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Interface element |
Description |
Column names panel |
The columns available in the view are listed with a check box.
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Reset to default |
Click to return the column names panel to its default setting of all columns selected (visible) and in a default order specific to the view. |
To resize columns in a table:
Hover the mouse pointer over a column divider. When the pointer changes to a double arrow, drag the divider to the right or to the left to resize the column.
To reset column widths to default, right-click the table header and select Reset Column Widths to Default.
To sort table rows:
Depending on the table, either:
Click a column header to sort rows in ascending order by that column. Click again to sort in descending order.
Drag and drop rows.
To filter elements in a table:
On the right side of the table header, click Find in List (Ctrl+F3, Command+F3 on macOS).
A standard alphanumeric search field appears.
Enter any characters, including digits, punctuation marks, special characters, and whitespace. Letters are not case-sensitive. The table is filtered as you type, and only rows containing matches are displayed. Wwise searches all columns, except in the File Manager where only the File column is searched.
Note | |
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In the List View, Query Editor, MIDI Keymap Editor, and Reference View, hidden child objects are not searched, and are therefore filtered out. |
To close the search field, click the Close icon to the right of the search field (Ctrl+F3, Command+F3 on macOS).
You can undo most actions that you perform in Wwise, such as changing a property value, moving an object, or creating an Event. If you undo an action by mistake, you can redo the last action to return to the previous value or state.
To undo an action, click Edit > Undo ><Action Name> or press Ctrl+Z. You can undo up to the last 200 actions.
To redo an action, click Edit > Redo ><Action Name> or press Ctrl+Y. You can invoke one redo command for each undo action.
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