>> Hmm. I don't think this glyph looks inconsistent... > > Here's what I meant. In the following image, we see two normal flats > superimposed (in green) on top of the doubleflat glyph (in > black). The stems are matched up to show what I'm referring to as > being inconsistent: [...] It would seem better to me to at least > have the the left counter look more like the right one.
Indeed, the code aims for having two almost identically sized `holes'. As other have already remarked, we need real-world samples to better judge this. >> > 2. scripts.pralldown, scripts.prallup: The wiggle's thick/thin parts >> > are opposite of the other similar glyphs, which seems odd to me. > > Well, whatever the reason, in fetatrills.mf, pralldown is the > created by scaling upprall by -X, which certainly does save a bunch > of extra code, but looks funny (and, again, inconsistent to the rest > of the trill-like glyphs) to me. Looks like its a similar story > with prallup being a -X of downprall. At least the code could be > changed to be pralldown = rotate(downprall, 180deg) and prallup = > rotate(upprall, 180deg). That would keep the thick/thin lines > pointing in the correct direction for each. What say ye? The same as with the double-flat: we need evidence from real-world scores to decide this. Do you have time to check this? Werner _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list lilypond-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel