Thanks for the suggestions - they've been very helpful. I had been on the right track for manipulating the spacing, but had missed the need for a "\newSpacingSection" to make these changes active.
But the real key to fixing my live problem was actually "\stopStaff" & "\startStaff" - that was exactly what I'd been looking for. Many thanks both for the supportive community, and the incredibly impressive documentation! Dave On Mon, 19 Jun 2023 at 22:32, Dave Shield <dave.shi...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I've been trying to adjust the width of the final line of a piece, > where lines are being explicitly broken at specific points, and the > last line would naturally be significantly shorter than the others. > If I use a non-ragged layout, the final line ends up overstretched > and looks ridiculous - if I turn on "ragged-last" then the final line > is compressed much more than the others. How can I get the general > spacing of the last line to be similar to the other lines in the > following example? (i.e. roughly half the width of the page). > > I can't help feeling I'm missing something obvious, but nothing I've > tried so far seems to work. Where am I going wrong? > > Thanks > Dave > > ========= example ============= > \version "2.22.1" > > scale = \relative c' { c d e f g a b c } > halfscale = \relative c' { c d e f } > > \score { > \new Staff { > \scale \break > \scale \break > \halfscale > } > > \layout { > % If set '##f', the last line is stretched across the full page, > % and looks much too sparse > % If set '##t', the last line is compressed into a minimal width, > % and looks much too compact > % How can this line be scaled to occupy about half the page width > % and hence have the same spacing as the rest of the piece? > ragged-last = ##t > } > }