Dear David,Personally, I prefer to use the Unicode symbols U+266D (♭) and U+266F (♯) (as well as U+266E ♮) when writing flats and sharps because they are more likely to be stylized according to the text font you are using. When I'm writing a text document or a bit of text in a lilypond score I do this.
Thanks, -William On 7/8/24 15:30, bobr...@centrum.is wrote:
I have been looking for a way to use music glyphs in inline text, specifically in a lilypond-book document. I want to write "the note should be Bb and not C#" but I want to use a flat and a sharp and not a lower case 'b' and an octothorpe (#).TIA, David
-- William Rehwinkel (any pronouns) Juilliard School '26 - Oberlin Conservatory '24 will...@williamrehwinkel.net - https://williamrehwinkel.net PGP Public Key: https://ftp.williamrehwinkel.net/pubkey.txt
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