Currently entering rhythmic slashes are a pain in the butt and have numerous kludge solutions. For example, if you simply change the noteheads to slash and set the notes to middle-line "b" the visual result and spacing is perfect. However the day you need to transpose, the slashes are all over the place, and it wreaks havoc with midi. Also using the stencil override kludge produces ugly slashes and the slashes cease to spread themselves out properly like quarter notes or whatever time-wise within the measure (too fat and they collide the bar).
Since a rhythmic slash is nothing more than a rest than looks like an unstemmed note with a slash notehead. LP should have a dedicated primitave (context independant) command to produce a rhythmic slash of a certain duration on any staff (just like a note) without having to write a new context or switch to drum mode, etc, or all the various other work-arounds and kludges that have been proposed here. Can something like the following be added easily: { rs4 rs rs rs } To produce rhythmic slashes instead of rests that will space out properly time-wise. And look exactly like middle line (treble clef) "b" notes that have the notehed overidden to slash and the stem (optionally) hidden? Also producing no midi sound or transpose problems. Sorry for the rant, but I think this needs to be a "primitave" capability syntax-wise just like entering a rest or note. Rhythmic slashes are heavily used in jazz/pop arrangements instead of percent measure rests used in classical, and to date entering them into lp is a heartach. thanks Rick -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Rhythmic-slashes%2C-are-just-too--%24-%40-%24--hard-to-do-tf3222382.html#a8949934 Sent from the Gnu - Lilypond - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user