On Sat, Apr 20, 2013 at 01:05:40PM +0200, David Kastrup wrote: > Colin Hall <colingh...@gmail.com> writes: > > > Here is a piece of opinion from me, so you know my position. Users of > > WYSIWYG engraving software accept the shortcomings because it is quick > > and effective. Users of text-based approaches accept the additional > > effort required because they are perfectionists. > > Actually, I tend to use text-based approaches not really because I care > about the perfection of the result, but because it allows me to properly > separate input, tool and output.
I haven't read the paper, but I'll chime in to say that I prefer text-based because then I have complete control over my "documents" (be they text, source code, or sheet music). When using a GUI tool[1], my hard work is at the mercy of some magical process which may or may not save the data correctly. If I want to view my past work, I'm at the mercy of those tools. When I was a composition student, I found that my fellow students would give excuses about their scores about once a week ("oh, Finale put a dotted line over those notes, but I couldn't figure out how to remove it"). [1] yes, a few GUI tools save data in a human-readable format, but those are unfortunately rare. By contrast, using a text-based tool (especially in conjunction with source control such as git) leaves me in control. If anything breaks (which it does occasionally), then I can easily compare the previous (working) input to the current version and figure how what I did wrong. - Graham _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user