This bit from Bitwig's official introduction walks through three quick audio-editing moves inside Bitwig Studio's audio clips: slicing events at detected onsets, reversing, and scaling event length. Each technique is demonstrated on a drum loop, making the results easy to hear and transfer to your own sessions.
Slicing at onsets automatically cuts the clip into individual audio events, which you can then stretch, duck, or rearrange independently. It's a fast way to get granular control over a loop without manually placing cuts.
Reverse works as expected, flipping playback direction on selected events. The more interesting option is Reverse Pattern, which reorders the events without flipping the audio inside them, giving you a rhythmic reshuffle that keeps the original transient character intact.
The Scale function lets you shrink or expand an event's length from the event menu. Combined with the pin icon to keep the command accessible and a quick duplicate shortcut, it becomes a tight loop for chopping up material in just a few keystrokes.