Thank you very much for this step-by-step guide. I followed the instructions, and now I can also write Lily files on my mobile. Not the most comfortable thing, but very useful for little things on the fly anyway! With a Bluetooth keyboard it's certainly much better, but for a first try I really used my built-in mobile keyboard, and that was a bit awkward. I wrote something small, it compiled allright, and I even could print it on my wifi printer.
Cool thing! Maybe I will find a better text editor, but even nano is available in Termux. For a long-time Linux user it makes you really feel at home ;-) Am Freitag, dem 03.02.2023 um 21:25 +0100 schrieb gmail: > Hi, I tried the tips given by Martin Tarenskeen and thought that a > small > sample guide may be useful for other users. > > Open PlayStore > search app Termux > > Open the terminal Termux and write: pkg install guile > > Then write: pkg install lilypond > LilyPond 2.24.0 will be installed > > Create a new directory: mkdir lilypond2.24 > Create a new file: touch file1.ly > > The directory where Termux put folder and file created is: data > /data/com.termux/files/home > but it is not visible from android file manager. > > Open PlayStore and download Material Files and start it, give all > permissions. > Click the 3 dots at the top of dx to do "Add Storage > External > Storage". > > At this point the Termux folder appears. Open it and manipulate the > files. Once you open the folder "LilyPond2.24" do "Use this folder", > and > from now on the folder path will appear in the side menu of Material > Files. > > Open the previously created file from here file1.ly and fill in the > lilypond code to compose the sheet music and save it. > > From Termux terminal go to the director lilypond2.24 where is > located > file.ly, then compile it from terminal: $ lilypond file.ly > Output a pdf in the same folder lilypond2.24 with the compiled sheet > music. > > I tested and it works.