Correction to my earlier message. There is no need to refer to document two. Yes, you are inserting a different document, but when you are done, you have one single document. There is no need to open any other window unless you need to do so. You can insert as many documents as you wish up to the limit of 2 GB and you can insert them wherever you wish. Neal -----Original Message----- From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Neal Ewers Sent: Wednesday, January 22, 2014 9:52 AM To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: copying and pasting two files together/should be simple but. . . Hi, I use Mary's method. It's clean and simple. Go to the place where you want document two to start and do control i. Locate the document from that dialog and press enter. Now it will be placed at the exact point in the file that you were located when you did the insert. If this doesn't answer your question, please feel free to ask more. Neal -----Original Message----- From: studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:studiorecorder-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jayson Smith Sent: Wednesday, January 22, 2014 9:14 AM To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: copying and pasting two files together/should be simple but. . . Rather than inserting the source document into a new blank document, why not just open the file outright? It gets its own window anyway. Jayson ----- Original Message ----- From: Mary Emerson <maryemerson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: studiorecorder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Date: Wed, 22 Jan 2014 06:40:19 -0800 Subject: [studiorecorder] Re: copying and pasting two files together/should be simple but. . . > I use control-i to insert a file into another one. With insert, you > can navigate to the file to be inserted, using a method similar to > Windows Explorer. If you want to choose what part of a file to insert, > you can open a new document, which becomes document 2, then insert > file two into that document, then choose what part you want, do a > control-c to copy that section into the clipboard, navigate to > document 1 with control-tab, go to the place where the new material > should go, then paste with control-v. This is quite different from > your description, but it's the method I have used for almost a decade. > > I hope it helps in some way. Others will probably have more to say > about this. SR is so flexible that there is usually more than one way > to do something. > > Mary > >