I was a bit lax in not mentioning that this particular setting is mentioned under the notation manual section 2.7.2, "Displaying Chords" for both version 2.12 and 2.13 documentation.
It is sometimes frustrating finding examples as a newer user- after a while you start to build a library of your favourite tricks and shortcuts without remembering where the description of the feature came from. In general, I do the following when I'm looking for information about a topic in lilypond and have done this since starting out: 1 - Check the notation manual. I will sometime browse the TOC or look specifically in the index. 2 - Do a search in the user list archives. 3 - Browse the LSR I almost always find what I am looking for by searching through the list archives. There will usually be a pointer to a previous discussion where the solution was described, or a pointer to the relevant notation manual chapter or LSR entry. The hardest thing is sometimes finding the right keyword to search. Cheers, Jack -- Jack Cooper, BerLen Music www.berlenmusic.com www.jack-cooper.com ----- Original Message ---- > From: Martin Tarenskeen <m.tarensk...@zonnet.nl> > To: Jack Cooper <jack.coo...@rogers.com> > Cc: "lilypond-user@gnu.org" <lilypond-user@gnu.org> > Sent: Mon, April 26, 2010 2:52:43 AM > Subject: Re: Chord Naming > > On Sun, 25 Apr 2010, Jack Cooper wrote: > You don't have to do > this for major sevenths- just include the following within your ChordNames > context: > > \context ChordNames = "Chords" { > > \set majorSevenSymbol = "maj7" > > ... > } Thank you. THAT's the kind of > easy-to-understand-and-ready-to-use example I was looking for. -- > Martin _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user