John McWilliam <jsmcwill...@gmail.com> writes: > I’m trying to get a tie to cross the barline into a split voice > measure. I have tried with and without the \voiceOne command but > cannot get this to work. Can any one help me?
First let's point out everything you get "cargo-cult" wrong, having it resemble working constructs without actual being them. That does not in itself solve your problem but may help you actually try out suggestions and ideas. LilyPond is a way of talking to a computer, and computers are masters at not just playing but actually being dumb. > f2.~ | % 3 > > > << > { %\voiceOne % Voice = "1" > \stemUp > f4 g8 a4 bes8 | % 4 > c2.~ | % 5 > c4 > } > > \\ > { \new Voice > \voiceTwo % Voice = "2" > \stemDown > r4 r8 f,4 f8 | % 4 > a2.~ | % 5 > a4 > } > >>> So here is the beef. Someone may have told you that you must not create new voices but rather only create a new voice for the non-tied part. That's why you have "\new Voice" in the second bunch. But for one thing, this doesn't help at all since << ... \\ ... >> _will_ for every part inside separated by \\ create a new voice, whether you want it or not. The only way to avoid this (outside of using \voices trickery, see below) is not to write \\ at all. Then "\new Voice" applies to the next music expression, meaning that you usually form that expression writing "{ ... }". But your "\new Voice" is followed by "\voiceTwo", meaning that the _only_ thing placed into a new voice here is "\voiceTwo", making it affect nothing at all. Presumably this is why you readded "\stemDown" after (presumably) someone told you you should be using \voiceOne/\voiceTwo instead. So more likely than not, every advice you got has been incorporated by you in a manner that doesn't actually work. Which will appear to you like you got bad advice that you needed to patch up in order to make it at least do what you already thought you accomplished yourself. That's frustrating both for you as well as your advisers, and hopefully I got to make you a bit more acquainted to LilyPond's manner of thinking such that you have better odds of successfully incorporating advice the next time round. Now here is how I would do things personally:
\version "2.24.0" \score { \relative c'' { \clef "treble" \key f \major \time 6/8 c4 r8 f,4. | % 2 f2.~ | % 3 \voices "", 2 << { \voiceOne % Voice = "" f4 g8 a4 bes8 | % 4 c2.~ | % 5 c4 \oneVoice } \\ { % Voice = "2" r4 r8 f,4 f8 | % 4 a2.~ | % 5 a4 } >> a8 a4 a8 } %end relative } %end score
Note that I _do_ use << ... \\ ... >> here, but I apply the \voices construct to it which tells it to use \context Voice = "" for the first part (and no voice-specific settings which is why I have to follow up with \voiceOne/\oneVoice) and \context Voice = "2" for the second (with \voiceTwo specific settings). If your top Voice is not anonymous but an actually named Voice, instead of writing \voices "", 2 ... you'd need to write \voices "MyVoiceName", 2 ... in order to get LilyPond to continue your voice with the given name, in this case "MyVoiceName". -- David Kastrup