Hey Greg,
Thanks for your comments.
I see how you have convinced yourself to justify the thought process! But as an old guy, who used to have (4) 20-space racks of samplers and modules, the ONLY way to know what was going where was to map it out, and the (North American?) way of looking at this was:
Rack number > module name or # > midi channel
If I had to think of Roland 760# 11 in rack 3, channel 9, that just doesn't flow to me. I ALWAYS looked at it as: source > rack # > module ? channel.
To me, the VEPro method is upside down: "3rd port in the 2nd node (instance), channel 14". You have to think a bit to map the routing from a signal flow train of thought...
Audio engineers are trained from day one to respect the signal flow FROM a point TO somewhere else. In a patchbay, the sources are on the top row and the destinations are on the bottom row. Signal flows FROM the origin TO the destination. Linear. Just like a music score for the non-engineers reading this. Measure 24 is always after measure 23 (except if you start getting into crazy DS or DC layouts). I guess that's why this always frustrates me. I have spent my career thinking linear signal flow, but now I have to invert the signal flow for ONLY VEPro.
"Hey, look, that's my son in the marching band, and he's the only one in step!"
I don't expect this to ever change, but I am happy to share my frustartion with the forum and encourage respectful conversation. I'm not calling you guys who LIKE it this way morons. Just trying to explain why there may be a better, more intuitive approach.
Best,
J
PS -- I am a big fan of VEPro -- use at least 2 instances 10-12 hours a day. Every day. I have sold more copies of VEPro to others than I can count. So it's only with a passion to improve it do I make comments. I am not calling you guys who like this naming convention stupid. I do wonder how you are able to think this routing as fast as the inverse. :-) Moving on.
PPS -- I received a few private emails after my initial post. One person called me "negative, impolite and degrading". Another said that they wish VE Pro worked exactly as I suggested. This person pointed out that Bidule (which I have no working knowledge) does exactly this. So go figure. I try to write a technical, professional report, and I get shot down. I am not a VSL fanboy. But I am a customer. Thanks for the dialog.