Hi Paul, Finally, after all types of trials, using 'stencil-scale is definitely the best workaround to reach an acceptable note head output:
#(set-global-staff-size 180) %% <= below scales and offsets were set at #(set-global-staff-size 300) and controlled at zoom #2000 #(set-default-paper-size "a4" 'landscape) \layout { indent = 0 \context { \Staff \omit Clef \omit TimeSignature } } \relative { \override NoteHead.stencil = #(lambda (grob) (ly:stencil-scale (ly:note-head::print grob) 0.980 0.924)) \override NoteHead.extra-offset = #'(0 . -.001) d'4*1/2 f2*1/4 a1*1/8 c\breve*1/16 e\longa*1/32 } Cheers, Pierre 2016-02-10 6:05 GMT+01:00 Paul Morris <p...@paulwmorris.com>: > Hi Pierre, > > On Feb 9, 2016, at 4:30 PM, Pierre Perol-Schneider < > pierre.schneider.pa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Some thoughts regarding the use of ly:stencil-scale: > 1. the command seems to have a side effect on the stem attachment (or > probably no effect on the note head extents - tested on a W8 OS) > 2. applying it on all note heads suppose that all glyphs have the same > scale defects (which is not the case, see my example with the harmonic > style). > > So here's my attempt to get something liable to all note head styles. > Unfortunately I did note find any direct procedure to get the 'default > style ( '() do not work): > > > Well, I was only intending that code for testing purposes. Looks like > you’ve got a good start on something for actual use. > > Cheers, > -Paul > _______________________________________________ bug-lilypond mailing list bug-lilypond@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-lilypond