On Tue, Mar 10, 2015 at 12:40 PM, Andrew Bernard <andrew.bern...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> This is good, and helpful, but I was wanting two beams between the groups
> of 32s, not one. [Maybe this is non standard after all.]


Ah my apologies; I misread your mail. A quick search didn't yield what
property sets the default at one beam for subdivision. Without changing
that your best bet would be to make a function that does what you wrote
automatically. I'm not good at writing music functions, but below is one I
just hacked up. It only works when there are 10 notes in the tuplet, but it
should illustrate how to do it. The proper way would probably involve
specifying a music-list of notes and working on that. Someone else might
best know how to do it.

\version "2.18.2"

tenTuplet =
#(define-music-function
  (parser location note1 note2 note3 note4 note5 note6 note7 note8 note9
note10)
  (ly:music? ly:music? ly:music? ly:music? ly:music? ly:music? ly:music?
ly:music? ly:music? ly:music?)
  #{
  \tuplet 5/4 { #note1
  \bl #note2
  \br #note3
  \bl #note4
  \br #note5
  \bl #note6
  \br #note7
  \bl #note8
  \br #note9
  #note10 }
  #})

bl = \once \override Stem.beaming = #(cons (list 0 1 2) (list 0 1))
br = \once \override Stem.beaming = #(cons (list 0 1) (list 0 1 2))

\score {
  \relative c'' {
    \time 1/4
    \tenTuplet e,32[
      c'
      bes
      e
      d
      bes'
      g
      d'
      d,
      aes']
  }
}
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