Hi Freeman,

If I understand you correct this might help you:

http://lilypondblog.org/2014/04/using-special-characters-from-smufl-fonts/

All the best,

James
---
James Correa
Composer - guitarist - sound designer
http://www.jamescorrea.net
http://wp.ufpel.edu.br/labcomp/

‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On May 20, 2018 11:39 PM, Freeman Gilmore <freeman.gilm...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Sun, May 20, 2018 at 7:36 PM, Andrew Bernard <andrew.bern...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
>
>> Hi Freeman,
>>
>> Let us know what you re trying to do. Why do you want to create a glyph?
>>
>> Are you new to lilypond? If so, welcome to the Pond!
>>
>> Andrew
>
> Andrew and others that have responded, thank you:
>
> I will start over.   What I was trying to say is that the # (my example) is a 
> new glyph to Lilypond; and it has the name “accidentals.sharp” and the code 
> “is” (and others).   I am trying to understand this because I want to create 
> some accidentals of my own.
>
> I assume that the “#” is not ‘markup’.  I do not understand what ‘markup’ is; 
> I do know that is has something to do with text.
>
> Also, I know that some of the accident are created with markup.
>
> My original question was how is a glyph correctly named?  I have read 
> mf/README several times I think I have that part.
>
> Then there is the code name, what is the correct way to name the code?   Why 
> two names; why not just the code name?
>
> For my use I would like to be able to use one or more glyphs with a note.
>
> I would like to start by using an unused accidental section of the SMuFL 
> Unicode.
>
> Thank you,
>
> ƒg
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