Thank you Aaron, it seems to work! But what does stencil mean exactly?
Best,
Erika
Lähettäjä: Aaron Hill
Lähetetty: lauantai 5. maaliskuuta 2022 18.35
Vastaanottaja: Erika Pirnes
Kopio: lilypond-user@gnu.org
Aihe: Re: DynamicTextSpanner spacing
On 2022-03-05 3:
On 2022-03-05 3:49 pm, Erika Pirnes wrote:
I would like the dotted line of the crescendo to start a bit later and
end a bit earlier. It is too close to "cresc.", in my opinion at
least. And sometimes too close to the "f" as well. (A tiny detail, for
sure, but it looks annoying.) Any ideas?
[...]
I would like the dotted line of the crescendo to start a bit later and end a
bit earlier. It is too close to "cresc.", in my opinion at least. And sometimes
too close to the "f" as well. (A tiny detail, for sure, but it looks annoying.)
Any ideas?
Minimal example below. (The problem with "f" di
Thanks Valentin, this is useful.
Sounds like I'll be back with questions :-)
L
On Sat, Mar 5, 2022 at 5:46 PM Valentin Petzel wrote:
> Hello Luca,
>
> the design of Lilypond inherently implies that there is no clear border
> between users and developers. Lilypond has an user interface, which i
Hello Luca,
the design of Lilypond inherently implies that there is no clear border
between users and developers. Lilypond has an user interface, which is covered
more or less in the docs, an extended interface in scheme, which is not
documented that extensively, and the C++ code that works beh
Le 05/03/2022 à 17:19, Werner LEMBERG a écrit :
Sometimes, this would be very helpful, yes (see attached image from
the last scene of 'Wozzeck'). I guess a possible work-around would
be to (ab)use `DynamicTextSpanner` for that.
[...] There is also this kind of code: [...] See issue #3176.
Ver
>> Sometimes, this would be very helpful, yes (see attached image from
>> the last scene of 'Wozzeck'). I guess a possible work-around would
>> be to (ab)use `DynamicTextSpanner` for that.
>
> [...] There is also this kind of code: [...] See issue #3176.
Very nice, thanks! Maybe this should
I took a "brief" detour where I went and learned a bit about scheme
Interlude
FWIW, I don't recall seeing this reference in your resources about learning
Scheme, so I'll leave a comment here:
Paul Wilson (professor at UTexas, Austin) wrote some notes on Scheme approx
in 1996,
which I thought