* Cameron and Trudy Horsburgh ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > I've been wondering lately how other people organise their workflow, the > tools used, and how they actually go through the typesetting process. > Given the number of different platforms supported, I imagine this would > vary widely.
I still haven't found a method I regard as "perfect", but I'm getting there :-) I use emacs (can't live without lilypond-mode :-)). Usually I have a workspace with emacs and a shell and another workspace with a dvi or ps always opened. I tend to automate the process of running lilypond with Make (you know, clean files, generate parts, and the like). The great thing about having the dvi or ps file opened all the time is that you can type the music, run make (from a shell or inside emacs), and switch to the other workspace (using the keyboard of course) to see the result. It's pretty convenient. Also, source specials (called "point and click" in the manual) is a must. > I'm also starting to play around with Emacs, but it'll be a while before > I'm comfortable enough with it to trust myself doing anything important. > I do like the CVS interface--I've been wondering how to version my work > efficiently. Version control is another thing I don't live without. I used to use CVS but now I'm switching to subversion. I tend to commit from time to time, and I try not to commit code that will "break" the score. Having a meaningful Changlog is also helpful. I also use tags to mark events like the first draft, the copy sent to first performance, etc. There are great tools I haven't tried yet like sly, lyqi, etc. Pedro _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user