Re: [LSR-620] Vertical line as a baroque articulation mark

2015-04-08 Thread tisimst
er/SendEmail.jtp?type=node&node=174231&i=7>> > > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-lilypond > > > > > > -- > = > Mats Bengtsson > Signal Processing > School of Elec

Re: [LSR-620] Vertical line as a baroque articulation mark

2015-04-08 Thread Mats Bengtsson
I would perhaps have written This short vertical line placed above the note is commonly used in baroque music. It is commonly typeset using \staccatissimo, but if you want the original layout, the following example demonstrates how to achieve such a notation. Possibly, you could also ad

Re: [LSR-620] Vertical line as a baroque articulation mark

2015-04-08 Thread Pierre Perol-Schneider
Ok, so how about: %{ This short vertical line placed above the note is commonly used in baroque music. Its meaning can vary, but generally indicates notes that should be played "staccatissimo". The following example demonstrates how to achieve such a notation. %} baroqueStaccatissimo = #(de

Re: [LSR-620] Vertical line as a baroque articulation mark

2015-04-07 Thread Mats Bengtsson
As a side-note, I normally typeset this articulation as a staccatissimo, when transcribing baroque music and as far as I know, it's common practice. This can at least be worth to mention in the comment of the snippet. /Mats On 2015-04-07 18:01, bug-lilypond-requ...@gnu.org wrote: Hi Squad

[LSR-620] Vertical line as a baroque articulation mark

2015-04-06 Thread Pierre Perol-Schneider
Hi Squad Members, Regarding this snippet: http://lsr.di.unimi.it/LSR/Item?id=620 I'm not sure about the 'font-size 3' effect; was it for the articulation line thickness? Anyway I'm thinking about putting a more user-friendly script. How about: upline = #(define-event-function (parser location) ()