Without being able to test it right now: my assumption is that the "\voiceThree" is responsible for the shift right. Have you tried using voiceOne instead?
______ Truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it. -- Flannery O'Connor > On 14 Sep 2015, at 10:43, Menu Jacques <imj-...@bluewin.ch> wrote: > > Hello folks, > > In the example below, I’d like to indicate that someone else is playing two > 16th notes while this player plays the 8th on the first beat of the second > bar, to help going a tempo altogether on the the second beat. > > Trouble is that the two 16th are too much on the right and the stems of the « > main » voice are too long. > > Thanks for the help! > > JM > > > <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> > > \version "2.19.25" > > \relative c' { > \time 2/4 > > d2 - \markup{ \italic "rall."} ~ | % 8 > > << > { > d8 [ > \tempo "A tempo" > d'16 \pp -. g,16 -. ] > } > \new Voice { > \small > \voiceThree > \hide NoteHead > \override NoteHead.no-ledgers = ##t > c'16 [ c ] s16 s16 > } > >> > > } > > _______________________________________________ > lilypond-user mailing list > lilypond-user@gnu.org > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
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