Joerg Anders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > LilyPond cannot deal with guitar chord diagrams. Actually it has a > special feature for chord name annotation. But this is unusable > for NoteEdit export because it tries reverse mapping from > pitch combination to chord name.
That's too bad. Why can't you use it, how does NoteEdit calculate chord names? > Thus, NoteEdit exports the > chord names as ordinary uptext. Unfortunately, LilyPond > does not take the width of the uptext into account. So > it can happen the chords overlap. Too bad you haven't asked, LilyPond can do both. I'm sure it's described in the manual. See: #(define flat '((raise . 0.2) (font-relative-size . -1) (music (named "accidentals--1")))) #(define sharp '((raise . 0.4) (font-relative-size . -1) (music (named "accidentals-1")))) \score { \notes { c2^"very wide and long text" c \break \fatText % short for \property Voice.textNonEmpty = ##t c2^"wide and long text with $\\sharp$ and $\\flat$" c | \break c^#`("C " ,sharp) c^#`("C " ,flat) } \paper{ indent = 0.0\mm linewidth = 70.0\mm } } > LilyPond has problems with # signs in uptext. Therfore # is > converted into +. If you go through TeX, you can't use the tex macro parameter character `#'. However, you can use $\sharp$ and $\flat$ (how do you do flat and natural now?). A much more beautiful option is to use markup text and use LilyPond's feta font characters. See above. Greetings, Jan. -- Jan Nieuwenhuizen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | GNU LilyPond - The music typesetter http://www.xs4all.nl/~jantien | http://www.lilypond.org _______________________________________________ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user