Thank you. I won't opt for LaTeX :-) For my part, my knowledge of GIMP is
sufficient that if it came to it, I'd output PNG, open in GIMP, and create
the boxes. It doesn't take very long to do that, but I've 25 output files
and doing this for each of them is, well ... :-) Was hoping it might be
easier to add some kind of \markup to the lilypond source. Not looking so
easy though.

Guy

Guy Stalnaker
jimmyg...@gmail.com

On Thu, Apr 6, 2017 at 1:09 PM, Jeffery Shivers <jefferyshiv...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hi Guy,
>
> On Thu, Apr 6, 2017 at 11:33 AM Guy Stalnaker <jimmyg...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > What I want to do is put a box, visually, around the engraved score, but
> independent of the engraved score. There will be two boxes, one (dashed or
> dotted) representing the margins of the document, and another .25" larger
> that represents a paper-size (this has to do with providing engraved music
> output that will be placed on non-standard sized paper by another person).
> The boxes show them where their margins/paper is on the engraving to allow
> them a sense for how much space the score will consume in their final
> document.
> >
> > This is basically four straight lines, two horizontal and two vertical
> but with reference to absolute page positioning, e.g., Line1: start 1.5"
> down from top margin and 1" in from left margin and draw horizontal for
> 7.5", Line2: start 1.5" down from top margin and 1" in from left margin and
> draw down 8.0", etc.. Everything that I've seen thus far are markup of some
> kind that are entered in reference to the score or, with the Notation
> Reference entries for \draw-hline for example, only seem to draw a line
> wherever the markup is place and not at an absolute position.
> >
> > I can, of course, output to png, open png in image editor and add the
> boxes manually, but it would be easier :-) to do this in lilypond. Maybe.
>
> A slightly less manual way would be to compile your normal LP document
> then embed those pages in a LaTeX document and draw the lines/boxes
> with some simple macros and/or TikZ. Here are some ways people have
> done similar things:
>
> http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/20640/how-to-add-
> border-for-an-image
> http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/251670/dotted-frame-around-the-text
>
> Maybe that's more *manual* than you want though. Idk. But that's what
> I would recommend as a simple solution anyway.
>
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