A suggestion for developers is that one could do something like

<c e g>\glissando
<e g b>

Or even crossing the lines:

<c e g>\glissando
<e b g>


On 15 April 2010 11:01, Bernardo Barros <bernardobarr...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Other illustrations to help to show the problem.
>
>
> On 15 April 2010 10:48, Bernardo Barros <bernardobarr...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have a question. I'm trying to notate the following situation (see PDF
>> file). Its a example from the guitar part.
>>
>> I'm having a lot of problems here, and it's going to happen again and
>> again, so it's better to find a more practical way to deal with it.
>>
>> 1. I need to do a glissando but not of a single note, but of a chord. AND
>> this lasts more one note, it should be re-attacked. So I also have to hide
>> the noteheads.
>> Is there an easier way to do this job rather then hide the noteheads and
>> draw lines from scratch. Or doing some weird trick hiding a voice or
>> something?
>>
>> 2. The scordatura have quarter-tones alterations. Currently the TAB staff
>> notation doesn't accept to put the quarter-tone. That's all right if I
>> translate this, but I can get confusing after a while. It would be better if
>> Lilypond could understand and translate it, so I could put the right note
>> (with the correct quarter-tone alteration) and the right string and Lilypond
>> would know the tablature notation. I know it works now, but I have to
>> compensate the quarter-tones and it's confusing.
>>
>> THANKS a lot,
>> Bernardo
>>
>>
>>
>
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