manual/_manual/04_starting-ardour.html

38 lines
1.7 KiB
HTML

---
layout: default
title: Starting Ardour
---
<p>
There are several ways of <dfn>starting Ardour</dfn>, which may vary
depending on which platform you are using it.
</p>
<ul>
<li>double-click the Ardour icon in your platform's file manager (e.g.
Nautilus on Linux, Finder on OS X)</li>
<li>double click on an Ardour session file in your platform's file manager</li>
<li>on Linux, you can also start Ardour <a
href="/ardours-interface/starting-ardour/starting-ardour-from-the-command-line/">on
the command line</a></li>
</ul>
<p>
When Ardour is run for the very first time, a special dialog is displayed
that will ask you several questions about your setup. You will not be asked
these questions again, but you can always modify your choices via the
<kbd class="menu">Edit &gt; Preferences</kbd> dialog.
</p>
<p>
If you want to use JACK, in general, it is sensible to start it <em>before</em> you run Ardour. This is not
necessary, but will provide you with more control and options over JACK's operation.
You can start JACK through its <abbr title="Command Line Interface">CLI</abbr>, or using a <abbr title="Graphical User Interface">GUI</abbr>
program, like <a href="https://qjackctl.sourceforge.io/">QjackCtl</a> or <a href="http://kxstudio.linuxaudio.org/Applications:Cadence">Cadence</a>.
</p>
<p>
If you open Ardour without specifying an existing session it will display
the <kbd class="menu">Session &gt; New...</kbd> dialog and the <kbd class="menu">Audio/MIDI Setup</kbd> dialog.
See <a href="/working-with-sessions/new-session-dialog/">New/Open Session Dialog</a> for a description of those dialogs.
</p>
{% children %}