@G3N-es, as @windowsrefund said, you're probably confusing tempo (eg. 4 BPM) and meter or time-signature (eg. 3/4).
one thing that you both also don't probably get, you can have different time-signatures (not tempo/bpm), one affecting to the main timeline (or "the sequencer", as you say) and another that applies to each MIDI clip (ie. piano roll "editor"), independently.
@windowsrefund: that is in fact why the time/tempo toolbar on the MIDI clip editors might get useful; MIDI clips can have a "secondary" meter or time-signature, that applies visually to the editor's grid and is different from the main timeline (known as "primary" here; think poly-rhythm/meter ;))
check the annotated screenshot below:
(the "reset" button is enabled when the "secondary" time-signature is different and resets to the "primary" when hit)
@G3N-es, as @windowsrefund said, you're probably confusing tempo (eg. 4 BPM) and meter or time-signature (eg. 3/4).
one thing that you both also don't probably get, you can have different time-signatures (not tempo/bpm), one affecting to the main timeline (or "the sequencer", as you say) and another that applies to each MIDI clip (ie. piano roll "editor"), independently.
@windowsrefund: that is in fact why the time/tempo toolbar on the MIDI clip editors might get useful; MIDI clips can have a "secondary" meter or time-signature, that applies visually to the editor's grid and is different from the main timeline (known as "primary" here; think poly-rhythm/meter ;))
check the annotated screenshot below:
(the "reset" button is enabled when the "secondary" time-signature is different and resets to the "primary" when hit)
hth.