>> Wouldn’t you just put each measure in a separate cell, so that a cell in >> column 227 corresponds to measure 227? Deleting the corresponding column >> would delete the measure, wouldn’t it?. Or do you have a different structure >> for the Excel spreadsheet in mind?
That’s exactly what I had in mind. (Sorry, I thought you meant the “make”-approach as an alternative rather than an extension to this idea.) I’m experimenting with the spreadsheet-python-appoach atm and it looks quite promising. M ______________________________ http://www.marcoll.de subscribe to newsletter <http://eepurl.com/cKUzLX> > On 20 Nov 2020, at 19:15, Martín Rincón Botero <martinrinconbot...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > Hi Maximilian, > > after having failed at the beginning with abjad (it’s looking better now) I > programmed some functions in Python to also be able to access instruments and > measures. For measures, I made a function that simply looks for | and gives > you back whatever is between | as a list. The Excel approach didn’t occur to > me. Wouldn’t you just put each measure in a separate cell, so that a cell in > column 227 corresponds to measure 227? Deleting the corresponding column > would delete the measure, wouldn’t it?. Or do you have a different structure > for the Excel spreadsheet in mind? > > Best regards, > Martín. > > www.martinrinconbotero.com > On 20. Nov 2020, 17:51 +0100, Maximilian Marcoll <maximil...@marcoll.de>, > wrote: >> Hi! >> >> thank you! >> That looks awesome. But what do you do if you want to delete measure 227 >> entirely? >> >> Cheers >> M >> >> >> >> >> ______________________________ >> http://www.marcoll.de <http://www.marcoll.de/> >> >> subscribe to newsletter <http://eepurl.com/cKUzLX> >>> On 20 Nov 2020, at 17:39, J Martin Rushton <martinrushto...@btinternet.com >>> <mailto:martinrushto...@btinternet.com>> wrote: >>> >>> Hi Max, >>> >>> Caveat: I've not used this personally, my scores are not complex enough. >>> >>> One of the standard ways of handling this is to use make >>> (https://www.gnu.org/software/make <https://www.gnu.org/software/make>). >>> Basically you write a makefile which tells make which files to compile and >>> use that as the input to Lilypond. Make is clever though, and can select >>> files on the basis of the last time they were changed, or if given >>> parameters (for instance to generate part scores). >>> >>> See http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.21/Documentation/usage/make-and-makefiles >>> <http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.21/Documentation/usage/make-and-makefiles> for >>> Lily's take on this. >>> >>> Regards, >>> Martin >>> >>> On 20/11/2020 16:03, Maximilian Marcoll wrote: >>>> Hi Everyone, >>>> Over last last couple of days I have been thinking about possible ways to >>>> organize the engraving of a rather large piece (~45+ staves) in Lilypond. >>>> My problem is that the piece in question might undergo significant changes >>>> in the future, so I need access to both instrument-wise and measure-wise >>>> organisation simultaneously. >>>> I am considering to enter the entire music in a huge excel spreadsheet and >>>> to write a (python)-script to create one .ly file per voice, >>>> storing all the music in variables that can be used both in the full score >>>> and the individual parts. >>>> I’m having difficulties imagining that I am the first one to have this >>>> idea, but couldn’t find anything online. >>>> Any hints? >>>> Thanks a lot! >>>> Cheers, >>>> Max >>>> ______________________________ >>>> http://www.marcoll.de <http://www.marcoll.de/> <http://www.marcoll.de >>>> <http://www.marcoll.de/>> >>>> subscribe to newsletter <http://eepurl.com/cKUzLX >>>> <http://eepurl.com/cKUzLX>> >>> >>> -- >>> J Martin Rushton MBCS >>> >>