Thanks for your help!

Using \justify as

```
\paper {
 scoreTitleMarkup = \markup {
   \column {
     \fromproperty #'header:piece
     \justify { #'header:instruction }
   }
 }
}
```

may be on the right track, but this results in (for all cases):

```
test.ly:7:17: error: not a markup
     \justify { 
                #'header:instruction }
```

Hopefully I’m missing something simple.

> On Dec 2, 2021, at 11:35 AM, David Kastrup <d...@gnu.org> wrote:
> 
> Nate Whetsell <nathan.whets...@gmail.com <mailto:nathan.whets...@gmail.com>> 
> writes:
> 
>> Thanks, but unfortunately using a backtick and commas seems to produce the 
>> same output. If it’s helpful, here’s the same example with a backtick and 
>> commas:
>> 
>> ```
>> \version "2.22.0"
>> 
>> \paper {
>> scoreTitleMarkup = \markup {
>>   \column {
>>     \fromproperty #'header:piece
>>     \justify-field #'header:instruction
>>   }
>> }
>> }
> 
> Well, \justify-field just takes a string, like \justify-string does.
> Maybe it should check for markup lists and pass them through \justify .
> 
> -- 
> David Kastrup

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