On 2-Aug-05, at 4:26 AM, Han-Wen Nienhuys wrote:
Graham Percival wrote:
When you define the \header inside the \score block, only the piece
(and presumably opus) fields are printed. Is this expected behaviour?
If the \header is defined before the \score (ie
\header{}
\score{}
Yes. Otherwise
> From: Graham Percival [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> When you define the \header inside the \score block, only the piece
> (and presumably opus) fields are printed. Is this expected behaviour?
> If the \header is defined before the \score (ie
> \header{}
> \score{}
>
> then all headers are pri
Graham Percival wrote:
When you define the \header inside the \score block, only the piece
(and presumably opus) fields are printed. Is this expected behaviour?
If the \header is defined before the \score (ie
\header{}
\score{}
Yes. Otherwise, we'd get two titles if the \header for \book was
I didn't know about this feature/bug either!
However, you may want to use
\paper{
scoreTitleMarkup = \bookTitleMarkup
}
anyway in your case to get full titles on all scores.
/Mats
Graham Percival wrote:
When you define the \header inside the \score block, only the piece
(and presumably op
When you define the \header inside the \score block, only the piece
(and presumably opus) fields are printed. Is this expected behaviour?
If the \header is defined before the \score (ie
\header{}
\score{}
then all headers are printed.
% 2.6.1, only piece is printed, not title.
\score{
{ c'\f }