I tried setting systems-per-page to 10. It gave the same error as setting
system-count to 20, and ran off the page.
3 measures per line is less than ideal, but it's readable. I'm typesetting
an etude book and am trying to avoid having fold-out pages as much as
possible.
On Sun, Aug 9, 2020, 02:4
Greetings Ahanu,
What happens if you set the systems-per-page variable to 10 instead of
using system-count = 20? Does the music then spill over onto a third
page? Just from experience, it seems that 48 sixteenth-notes per line
would get rather cramped, no? I usually use 32-40 16ths per line as my
Hello,
An étude I'm typesetting needs to fit on 2 pages with reasonable vertical
space. Normally, I'd just set system-count in \paper (in this case, 20
systems in 2 US letter pages), but this time it says "warning: cannot find
line breaking that satisfies constraints" and just runs off the page. I
>> Is there a possibility to automatically get a sharp accidental for
>> the third quarter note? I could neither find a hint in the manual
>> nor in the regression tests...
>
> Accident rules are implemented before line-breaking. If they were
> to take line-breaking into account, they'd need t
FWIW, this issue was reported in 2018 as well
http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/Accidental-style-in-presence-of-mid-bar-line-breaks-td214207.html.
A new accidental style would indeed solve this.
El El sáb, 8 ago 2020 a las 22:37, Werner LEMBERG escribió:
>
> > That's a pity, I guess, but se
> That's a pity, I guess, but seeing that you're manually putting a
> mid-bar break, it makes sense to manually mark the needed accidental
> as well.
For my use case I really would like to have automatic behaviour. The
example sent to the list was just for demonstration purposes; in
reality I'm
Werner LEMBERG writes:
> Folks,
>
>
> look at this example:
>
> \paper {
> line-width = 50\mm
> }
>
> { c'4 cis' \bar "" \break
> cis' c' }
>
> Is there a possibility to automatically get a sharp accidental for the
> third quarter note? I could neither find a hint in the manual nor
That's a pity, I guess, but seeing that you're manually putting a mid-bar
break, it makes sense to manually mark the needed accidental as well. I
guess I never wondered how to further customize the available accidental
styles other than adding the occasional exceptional accidental.
El El sáb, 8 ag
> If you need it automatically, I'm not sure if \accidentalStyle
> "neo-modern" repeats the accidental after a break.
Thanks for the idea, but no, it doesn't. As far as I can see, broken
bars aren't covered at all by the available accidental rules.
Werner
If you need it automatically, I'm not sure if \accidentalStyle "neo-modern"
repeats the accidental after a break.
El El sáb, 8 ago 2020 a las 20:09, Martín Rincón Botero <
martinrinconbot...@gmail.com> escribió:
> I believe cis'! should do the trick.
>
> El El sáb, 8 ago 2020 a las 20:01, Werner
I believe cis'! should do the trick.
El El sáb, 8 ago 2020 a las 20:01, Werner LEMBERG escribió:
>
> Folks,
>
>
> look at this example:
>
> \paper {
> line-width = 50\mm
> }
>
> { c'4 cis' \bar "" \break
> cis' c' }
>
> Is there a possibility to automatically get a sharp accidental
Folks,
look at this example:
\paper {
line-width = 50\mm
}
{ c'4 cis' \bar "" \break
cis' c' }
Is there a possibility to automatically get a sharp accidental for the
third quarter note? I could neither find a hint in the manual nor in
the regression tests...
Werner
Hi Rutger
Thanks again for sharing your brilliant work on staff management.
I downloaded pmp.ily, and I have got it working for my orchestral
score. Clearly it is more versatile and controllable than
\partCombine. But it is, of course, somewhat more complicated to use,
by its very nature and al
> ParenthesesItem.stencils relies on
> "accidentals.leftparen"/"accidentals.rightparen". The size is
> usually done via ParenthesesItem.fontsize. I often find this not
> convincing, especially for huge Parens. Why not build the stencils
> using (improved) parenthesize-stencil? Including sort
Am Sa., 8. Aug. 2020 um 12:59 Uhr schrieb Werner LEMBERG :
> I have one wish to improve the appearance of the parentheses: Would it
> be possible to scale the parentheses glyphs (i.e., scaling
> `ParenthesisItem.font-size`) according to the `y-scale` value? Right
> now, the parentheses are very t
> Here is a version that still relies on scaling, but does so in a
> hopefully more visually appealing manner. Note that I am using the
> square root of the y-scaling factor for the x-scaling factor, as 1:1
> scaling made the parens too fat in my opinion.
Brilliant, thanks a lot! Please contri
On 2020-08-08 3:59 am, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
I would like to parenthesize the lower two notes of the chord.
There should be a single parenthesis to the left and right
(contrary to what `\parenthesize` does).
Does something like this help?
Yes, very nice!
(The logic here is for the engraver
Aaron,
This is simply outstanding. I would never have even dared to ask for
such a thing. Bravo.
Andrew
>> I would like to parenthesize the lower two notes of the chord.
>> There should be a single parenthesis to the left and right
>> (contrary to what `\parenthesize` does).
>
> Does something like this help?
Yes, very nice!
> (The logic here is for the engraver to generate a single
> Parenthese
Thank you everyone, all of you were right. It was not a problem with my
midi file, just with what I was reading it with. I was trying to read it
with timidity, but I am indeed missing packages / sound fonts, and my midi
file is read fine on another computer. Since it was also the first time I
was t
On 2020-08-07 10:19 pm, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
Consider the following chord:
{ }
I would like to parenthesize the lower two notes of the chord. There
should be a single parenthesis to the left and right (contrary to what
`\parenthesize` does).
Looking up the LSR I couldn't find a generic so
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