On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 1:59 PM, Silas Brown<ss...@cam.ac.uk> wrote: > Continuing the thread from November 2007: > (see http://www.mail-archive.com/lilypond-u...@gnu.org/msg32740.html ) > > Here is a Python hack that can add numbered notation (Chinese jianpu) to a > line > of music. The numbered notation is added as ^\markup commands that include > appropriate EPS files. These EPS files are generated using pslatex (you need > the PostScript fonts for LaTeX, although you could substitute Computer Modern > fonts by replacing pslatex with latex but then the jianpu numbers will not > match > Lilypond's other text). The music parser is extremely basic, so don't try it > on > anything too complicated. Octaves must be absolute, and must be in the range > c' > to b'''. However it is OK not to specify length on every note. Numbering > with > 1=C is assumed (although the script can easily be adapted to other > numberings). > > The script works well for me in Lilypond 2.10.33. However it does not work so > well in 2.12.2 because the ^\markup commands are re-positioned so much (which > is > a good attempt to avoid collisions, but it often results in the jianpu numbers > being printed at different heights just because they are a little close to > each > other). Does anybody know how to do it better in 2.12.2?
Have you tried \textLengthOn? See Notation Reference 1.8.1 Andrew _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list lilypond-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel