Hi Simon,

I think MuseScore can do it also, for simple cases. Nothing is impossible -
it's just software after all!

Harm has given me a pointer to as way to fake this out which works fine
when adapted a little. But it's lots of code, and the idea of \noBreak
\score would be very helpful to many people I feel sure.

Andrew



On 24 February 2017 at 08:54, Simon Albrecht <simon.albre...@mail.de> wrote:

> Am 22.02.2017 um 14:41 schrieb Andrew Bernard:
>
>> I would still like to be able to start a new score with no break, for
>> example in books of say, harpsichord music with lots of small, short
>> movements, where the systems would be the same proportions but the piece is
>> new.
>>
>
> There are other conceivable use cases, e.g. the attached one, or other
> cases with a very short recitativo inbetween larger scored movements. But
> they are exceedingly rare.
> Also, a proper solution would certainly require the C++ page layout
> algorithms to optionally not make a line break between scores (the input
> syntax could theoretically be as simple as
> \score { c } \noBreak \score { d }
> ). I like that idea, but allow me to say that this is probably never going
> to be possible (in any music notation software)…
>
> Best, Simon
>
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