On 20 March 2013 15:01, m...@mikesolomon.org <m...@mikesolomon.org> wrote: > > I don't completely follow what you're saying above - could you say it > another way?
I don't follow this whole developers discussion about choosing the best command name for the users. Please correct me if I'm wrong. 1. After this has been implemented, slurs across repeats would be actually printed (broken, up to/from the bar line), with the part printed looking like as if the repeat was unfolded. 2. This would be the default behavior (great, huge improvement!). 3. This behavior could be prevented (I can't understand why people would choose this, but well) by setting the property slurOverRepeat=##f 4. "\broken" (or so) would be manual a command to print such "invisible start/end of slur", anywhere in the piece (for which purpose??). Shouldn't you need a "starting pitch"? The shape of a slur c( f) is different from slur g( f) , so should be the broken version. If so, why not a command like LaTeX \phantom? \phantom { c( } f) d( \phantom { c( } Cheers, Xavier -- Xavier Scheuer <x.sche...@gmail.com> _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list lilypond-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel