Thanks, in the mean time indeed I found out that working with two voices is the solution. If I'd known that someone would bother after all this time to answer my question, I'd have warned that I found the solution. Thanks :)
arie On Sun, 2003-08-03 at 00:59, Graham Percival wrote: > On Sat, 19 Jul 2003 10:41:14 +0200 > arie-lily <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > \score { > > \notes { > > \key e \major > > \time 6/8 > > e2.-\p ~ < e2 {r4 r4 r8} > b'8-\p > > < {e2.-\p ~ e2} \\ {s2. r4 r4 r8} > b'8-\p > > > } > > } > > > Is there a way to prevent this, or am I 'obliged' to treat this guitar > > music as two voices, i.e. bass and treble, and put those two voices on > > one staff? > > I think that you need* to treat them as two voices (as I've shown > above). I'm not certain what <e2 {r4 r4 r8}> means, but I don't know > anything about guitars. > > * of course, the message you got was a warning rather than an error > message. If you like the output that it produces, then feel free to > ignore all the warnings. :) > > Cheers, > - Graham -- The biggest losers of all are the winners of an unjust war. Bush lied. Thousands died. Only the winning part is over. _______________________________________________ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user