You didn't include the full example. It isn't by chance so that
the original code used the \relative feature?

  /Mats

Quoting Martin Cassell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

Perhaps as a newcomer I'm missing something, but this looks like a bug to me:

I was experimenting with a .ly file produced by musiccvt, in which a vocal line with a treble-8 clef had been pitched an octave too high (leger lines that would
frighten a countertenor, let alone a baritone!).

From the documentation, the solution seemed straightforward:

   \transpose a' a { ... }     % or similar

The outcome was unexpected: first note unchanged, remainder transposed down by
two octaves.

Speculatively, I tried a variation:

   \transpose a a { ... }   % shouldn't this leave the pitch unchanged?

The outcome was, at least, consistent with my first attempt: first note raised
by an octave, remainder lowered by an octave.


/mpc



_______________________________________________
bug-lilypond mailing list
bug-lilypond@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-lilypond






_______________________________________________
bug-lilypond mailing list
bug-lilypond@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-lilypond

Reply via email to