no, it's correct. Staff lines are in layer -1 (I think), while the
rest is in layer 0.
So, using a whiteout in a layer 0 object only guarantees to cover stafflines.
2007/4/19, Graham Percival <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Is there a bug in input/regression/whiteout.ly ?
In 2.11.22, I see ledger lines w
Is there a bug in input/regression/whiteout.ly ?
In 2.11.22, I see ledger lines whited out, but the note stem is still
there. The texidoc says
\header{
texidoc = "The whiteout command underlays a white box under a
markup. The whitening effect only is only guaranteed for staff lines,
since
John Mandereau wrote:
Le mardi 17 avril 2007 à 18:56 -0400, Han-Wen Nienhuys a écrit :
2007/4/17, John Mandereau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Han-Wen, do you find the (svg) sources of the files so the relevant
pngs can be replaced by svgs?
Certainly; however, we need to be careful,
Le mardi 17 avril 2007 à 18:56 -0400, Han-Wen Nienhuys a écrit :
> 2007/4/17, John Mandereau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > > Han-Wen, do you find the (svg) sources of the files so the relevant
> > > pngs can be replaced by svgs?
>
> Certainly; however, we need to be careful, since the SVGs will be
> c
To any developers,
If you add a new feature but don't feel like writing an entry for the
manual (or the feature is too small to merit such an entry), please
consider adding a small file to input/tolsr/ . You should probably
still add something to input/regression/ , but now that directory wi
You missed the, perhaps, most common solution, namely to typeset the
tempo as a text mark (see the section on Text Marks) before the first note
of the piece. In the section on "Style sheets", you can even find an example
of how to define a function tempoMark, which automatically changes the
alignm
I am surprised that there is not an initial header that
establishes the text for the tempo. In
all the music I
have seen the leftmost edge of the initial tempo
text lines up with the leftmost
edge of the meter. I
looked through the examples and there are
three workarounds:
putting tempo