Hi you can change the font for a single character in \markup:
\addlyrics { Buon gior -- \markup\concat{no \override #'(font-name . "DejaVu Sans Bold"){‿} al} mon -- do. } (I tested with "DejaVu Sans Bold" because I'm not sure if the other one exists on my computer) Jakob. 2010/11/23 Francisco Vila <paconet....@gmail.com>: > 2010/11/22 Federico Bruni <fedel...@gmail.com>: >> Il giorno lun, 22/11/2010 alle 22.46 +0100, Francisco Vila ha scritto: >>> > \addlyrics { >>> > \override LyricText #'font-name = #"DejaVuLGC" >>> > Buon gior -- no~al mon -- do. >>> > } >>> > >>> >>> Thank you, that works, but I like the default font for the lyrics and >>> I'd prefer to change only that of the lyric tie if necessary. >> >> What about using the undertie directly in your (utf-8) source file? >> >> Buon gior -- no‿al mon -- do. >> >> Does it look better? > > Unfortunately not, see image. I think this produces the same output > as the usual '~'. Do you know a way of figuring out which font does a > glyph of the PDF belong to? > > -- > Francisco Vila. Badajoz (Spain) > www.paconet.org , www.csmbadajoz.com > > _______________________________________________ > lilypond-user mailing list > lilypond-user@gnu.org > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user > > _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user