Hi Ben, Just one general thing regarding markup commands (not only boxes):
I think many people are not aware of the fact that a command like \markup \bold { A bold text } will apply \bold to every single element in { … } individually, i.e. it will expand to \markup { \bold A \bold bold \bold text } In the case of \bold, you won't see much of a difference, but a \box command will make a huge difference, because each element in { … } will get its own box. Another quite obvious example is changing the \fontsize: \markup \fontsize #12 { This is rather big } The \fontsize #12 (four times the size of \fontsize #0) will scale up the individual words, but the spaces between these words will remain at \fontsize #0, i.e. will be much too small. \markup \fontsize #12 "This is rather big" will change the \fontsize of the string as a whole, including the word spaces. In the case of simple text, we can use double quotes "...", but as soon as markup commands (like \note or \italic or \raise) come into play, we need the \line { … } or \concat { … } statement to pack the distinct elements into one. All the best, Torsten -- Sent from: http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/User-f3.html _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user