![]() Dorico is for writing and formatting notation. I don't do a lot of CC Programming in Dorico. Cubase does, so MIDI transfer is obsolete as far as I'm concerned. I only use MIDI if the DAW I'm going to doesn't support MusicXML Import. I never use MIDI, not for going to Notation or back, with Cubase and Dorico. Perhaps the best we can hope for is a better file format for the two programs to exchange data more seamlessly. Like you, I look forward to the day where the two bits of software can function simultaneously but I don't know if it will ever happen as both programs are so different. Once working in Cubase I pretty much try to avoid going back to Dorico. Merging changes between a clean and messy version of the score is also a bit annoying. Midi data never goes back from Cubase to Dorico because I've found notation programs can interpret midi data in unexpected and messy ways that require a lot of work to clean up. ![]() I then do a single midi export from Dorico for import to Cubase. Noteperformer for Dorico helps greatly in this regard too! Main reason I do this is to ensure the score actually sounds great prior to delving into samples and keeps the composition separate from the mixing stage (and so forth). The most efficient way I have come up with is doing all the scoring first in Dorico. I have same the workflow, using export and import of midi data, though there isn't a magic bullet that works really well that I have come across.
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