Either you did not set the loop marker in the song editor or you are playing in pattern mode. In either instance, pressing the stop button in the playback panel or tapping the space bar will stop playback. If you place the loop marker at the end of the song editor, FL Studio will see no more patterns to play ahead to and will automatically stop at that point (rather, the song will stop and the cursor/play head will return to the start position). If there are more patterns after the loop marker, FL Studio will return to that position and loop after the last pattern.
When taking hands off the midi keyboard it will stop a loop from playing. Taking your hands off will stop everything. No if you take your hands off the keys it carries on playing till the end of the loop.
Using Rewire, you can host Fl Studio inside Studio one.
If you mean that the zip file was actually created by FL Studio as a zipped loop package, then yes, you can simply load it into any FL Studo as long as you used the same version and the FL standard plugins. The FL zipped loop package only saves information about what plugins were used and you may have to add any others used to the zip file. It also contains all of the samples that did not come as part of the FL Studio standard sample packs.
Double click on the loop so that the 'Channel Settings' come up. Then click on the 'MISC' tab. Then hit the "Cut itself" button. Now the sample won't keep on repeating.
No, FL Studio is just software.
FL Studio was created on 1997-12-18.
FL Studio 8 is better and is free.
SackOwoe Recording Studio is in Largo FL.
You must purchase FL Studio to receive a serial code.
If you export a complete song that uses samples and default FL Studio plugins as a zipped loop package, then the FLP file along with all samples used can me loaded from any source and played on someone else's FL Studio.
Reason (with its latest version, which includes Record) is very comparable to FL Studio.
The only legal way of downloading it is by buying it of the FL Studio Website. Or you can pirate it at your own risk. Hope I answered your question :)