As a repeat is not involved, I didn't look there.  I searched for things like 
"divided tie" or "split tie" (thinking of the part of a tie after a line break, 
but that's automatic so nothing came up).  I'm not aware that there is even a 
name for this item.  I knew about laissez vibrer, so maybe I would have 
stumbled across an example or snippet in which a usage such as mine was 
illustrated.


But I guess if I had used the index then seeing "tie, from nothing" would have 
caught my eye - but I didn't, because as usual I did a Google search with 
"lilypond", which is usually the best way in my experience because it find 
things in snippets and mailing lists as well.  Also, in my case, it's not "from 
nothing" - it's just deferred for practicality.  As always with searching, 
finding the right terms is crucial!


Paul



 From:   Jean Abou Samra <j...@abou-samra.fr> 
 To:   Paul Hodges <p...@cassland.org>, Xavier Scheuer <x.sche...@gmail.com> 
 Cc:   Lilypond-User Mailing List <lilypond-user@gnu.org> 
 Sent:   11/03/2022 12:41 
 Subject:   Re: Opposite of Laissez Vibrer? 

 
 
Le 11/03/2022 à 12:38, Paul Hodges a écrit : 
> Perfect - Thank you!  I'd never have thought of looking there.... 
 
Where did you look? As this question comes up fairly frequently, I'd like 
to know if there is a better structure we can give to the manual on this 
topic to help people find their way. 
 
By the way, note that in the 2.23 documentation, if you look in the index 
at letter T ... 
https://lilypond.org/doc/v2.23/Documentation/notation/lilypond-index.html#lilypond-index_cp_letter-T
 
... you find "tie, from nothing". 
 
Thanks, 
Jean 
 

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