Andrew Bernard <andrew.bern...@gmail.com> writes: > Hi David, > > I am unable to understand your response. Is my mail not clear? I > explicitly diagrammed what would be good. > > At no point in this topic have I offered criticism of any kind of > lilypond, or your work. Others would verify that I am sure. > > Whence this aggression in your reply David? It is entirely unjustified. > > In English, which I now must assume is not your primary language since > you seem to not understand perfectly polite writing, to say one 'would > settle for something' is one perfectly normal way of saying that such > as solution would be good, fine, and satisfactory.
>From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: settle v 12: accept despite lack of complete satisfaction; "We settled for a lower price" <URL:http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/settle+for> settle for something to agree to accept something (even though something else would be better). We wanted a redone, but settled for a blue one. \I\Ask your grocer for Wilson's canned corn—the best corn in cans. Don't settle for less. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. settle for something to agree to or accept something, although it is not exactly what you want Patients will have to settle for fewer tests because rising costs have made them too expensive. Cambridge Dictionary of American Idioms Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2003. Reproduced with permission. settle for Accept or be satisfied with as a compromise, as in He really wanted a bigger raise but decided to settle for what they offered. [Mid-1900s] The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer. Copyright © 2003, 1997 by The Christine Ammer 1992 Trust. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved. settle for v. To accept something in spite of not being completely satisfied: I had to settle for a lower wage than the one I requested. The American Heritage® Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs. Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved. Looks like my mottled grasp of English rubbed off on other people. That's the price of being old: you never remember which trends you actually started yourself. > In what way is the small diagram I included unclear? After saying that you'll "settle for" the line being left-justified with the other lines, your diagram states "last line can do this". Again, this sounds like something you don't actually consider optimal but propose it as some sort of least-resistance compromise, otherwise "last line should do this" would have seemed more appropriate, at least to someone as unversed in the subtleties of English language as I happen to be. And before you even start, you state "Tools such as InDesign offer all the possibilities for the last line, of which there are several, as you know." Again this sounds like you consider left-alignment of the last line as a subset at best of what you would really consider complete support. So what are we actually supposed to aiming for (rather than settling for)? I suppose you could _settle_ for something like
#(define-markup-command (center-to layout props width arg) (number? markup?) #:properties ((line-width)) (interpret-markup layout props #{ \markup { \hspace #(* 0.5 (- line-width width)) \override #`(line-width . ,width) #arg } #})) \markuplist \center-to #60 \justified-lines { Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Phasellus scelerisque justo ut posuere aliquam. Integer aliquet eu nunc a iaculis. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Maecenas ornare leo non est hendrerit, ac ultricies justo porttitor. Nullam pulvinar mollis scelerisque. Pellentesque ut quam quis nibh laoreet consequat. Etiam vitae felis eu leo sodales vulputate. }
but that does not really tell us what kind of facility or feature is actually missing in LilyPond. We don't want to add stuff that works only for a subset of applications, so the question is what should actually be there. How would you have desired your input to look? -- David Kastrup
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