Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread Joshua Netterfield
Hi, I want to figure out why this isn't working for you. I sent you an email directly, which might have ended up in your spam list. To reduce noise here, it would be great if you could either reply to me directly or create a GitHub issue. (You can reply here if too if those options don't work

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread Joshua Netterfield
Hi all, I'm sorry for alienating some of you with the Windows comment. The website itself, https://www.hacklily.org should work in many modern graphical web browsers, including ones on Windows. Currently, the main reason for running the server itself would be to contribute to Hacklily (please

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread Sven Axelsson
On 8 January 2018 at 06:31, Hugh S. Myers wrote: > 'OS that is not Windows'…so you are saying to hell with 7 out of 10 users? > Well, that's one way to cut down on all that annoying customer noise! > That simply means that the web site it will not run *as-is* on Windows. It most certainly is pos

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread m.tarensk...@zonnet.nl
I tried hacklily on Linux Fedora, not extensively, but it worked.Verzonden vanaf mijn Huawei mobiele telefoon Oorspronkelijk bericht Onderwerp: Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editorVan: Blöchl Bernhard Aan: lilypond-user@gnu.orgCc: Actually tried https://www.hackl

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread Blöchl Bernhard
Actually tried https://www.hacklily.org on linux. The only action is a message in the right window "Could not connect to server ..." Has anybody successfully tried hackily on linux? If not, please send me a message so I can put that thread on my spam list. Does it work on Windows? May be i

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread Blöchl Bernhard
I am completely confused. Hackily did not impress me, but due to this "not Windows" discussion I opened https://github.com/hacklily/hacklily and read "... It consists of a frontend Lilypond editor using monaco (the editor that powers vscode) and a backend Lilypond renderer. ..." monaco is a vi

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread Thomas Morley
2018-01-08 6:31 GMT+01:00 Hugh S. Myers : > 'OS that is not Windows'…so you are saying to hell with 7 out of 10 users? > Well, that's one way to cut down on all that annoying customer noise! > > --hsm > p.s. I write multi-platform modules for CPAN and yes it is a great deal of > extra work but it i

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread Andrew Bernard
Hello Hugh. What are you referring to? Nothing that I can see in this thread? Andrew On 8 January 2018 at 16:31, Hugh S. Myers wrote: > 'OS that is not Windows'…so you are saying to hell with 7 out of 10 users? > Well, that's one way to cut down on all that annoying customer noise! > _

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-08 Thread David Kastrup
"Hugh S. Myers" writes: >> On Sun, Jan 7, 2018 at 7:43 PM, David Kastrup wrote: >> >>> Joshua Netterfield writes: >>> >>> > Hi Andrew, >>> > >>> > Absolutely, supporting other versions is on my TODO list, and I'll >>> > post back here when it's done. >>> > >>> > I used the term "unstable" becau

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-07 Thread Hugh S. Myers
'OS that is not Windows'…so you are saying to hell with 7 out of 10 users? Well, that's one way to cut down on all that annoying customer noise! --hsm p.s. I write *multi-platform* modules for *CPAN *and yes it is a great deal of extra work but it is pretty much '*the right thing to do*'… On Sun,

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-07 Thread David Kastrup
Joshua Netterfield writes: > Hi Andrew, > > Absolutely, supporting other versions is on my TODO list, and I'll > post back here when it's done. > > I used the term "unstable" because I saw the term "unstable > development versions" [1] on the Lilypond website (e.g., at > http://lilypond.org/devel

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-07 Thread Joshua Netterfield
Hi Andrew, Absolutely, supporting other versions is on my TODO list, and I'll post back here when it's done. I used the term "unstable" because I saw the term "unstable development versions" [1] on the Lilypond website (e.g., at http://lilypond.org/development.html), not because I have had a

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-07 Thread Andrew Bernard
Hi Joshua, There was a thread recently about the use of the term 'unstable'. The 2.19 line at the present state of development is not unstable, quite the opposite. It's a self deprecating term of open source modesty that has the negative effect of making people think this line should be avoided. B

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-07 Thread Joshua Netterfield
Knute, That is correct. Only 2.18.2 is currently supported. In the future, Hacklily may look for a "version" statement and use an unstable version if needed. Best, Joshua Netterfield On 2018-01-06 08:41, Knute Snortum wrote: Currently, Hacklily only uses 2.18.2, is that correct?  It would be

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-06 Thread Knute Snortum
Currently, Hacklily only uses 2.18.2, is that correct? It would be nice for it to use multiple versions, one of which would be 2.19.80. --- Knute Snortum (via Gmail) On Wed, Jan 3, 2018 at 4:32 PM, Stjepan Horvat wrote: > Its very nice and very cool tool for inserting notation for users from

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Stjepan Horvat
Its very nice and very cool tool for inserting notation for users from musescore. *Nesmotren govori kao da mačem probada, a jezik je mudrih iscjeljenje. Izreke 12:18* On Wed, Jan 3, 2018 at 8:58 PM, Karlin High wrote: > On 1/3/2018 1:51 PM, Knute Snortum wrote: > >> I finally figured out how to

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Karlin High
On 1/3/2018 1:51 PM, Knute Snortum wrote: I finally figured out how to use the tool. It reminds me a little of my experiences with MuseScore. -- Karlin High Missouri, USA ___ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mail

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Knute Snortum
The way to duplicate this, for me, was to Save/Share a file, then go back and try to load any file. I finally figured out how to use the tool. What was confusing me was that a) there was already a whole measure rest in the display bar, and b) that you need to be pointing the mouse on the rest to

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Blöchl Bernhard
I tried on Linux Mint with firefox and only get "Could not connect to server. Trying again in 28…" in the right window, conting high the seconds (?) Regards Am 03.01.2018 15:22, schrieb Martin Tarenskeen: On Wed, 3 Jan 2018, Joshua Netterfield wrote: Hi all, I've been working on an online Li

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Knute Snortum
I'm having trouble loading a LilyPond source file from GitHub. I have a very simple file here: https://github.com/ksnortum/sheet-music When I click on the dropdown on the top-left, I see AllCs.ly -- so far, so good. But when I click on it, I get the empty template, not my modified source file.

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Jaime Oliver La Rosa
great work joshua! J On 01/03/2018 12:19 AM, Joshua Netterfield wrote: Hi all, I've been working on an online LilyPond editor in my spare time, and would appreciate your feedback. You can use it as a scratchpad, or sign in with a GitHub account to save sheet music directly there. Try it a

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Joshua Netterfield
Hi Karlin, In my mind, the main usecase for something like Hacklily is to share sheet music with others, and I plan to extend that part of Hacklily (e.g, by supporting publishes to GitHub Pages and thinking more about collaboration) in the future. You can make the "sheet-music" repo private

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Joshua Netterfield
Hi Joram, That's useful feedback. I assume this is also the confusion that Knute had? I'll have to think about how to improve that. Joshua On 2018-01-03 11:37, Noeck wrote: Hi Joshua, very nice. The auto-update of the output and the clef and key selection are very intuitive. I'd suggest to

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Joshua Netterfield
Hi, I've added a theme toggle to the menu. You may need to do a full refresh to see it (ctrl+shift+R). On 2018-01-03 11:15, Knute Snortum wrote: Personally I like the dark theme, but yes, it would probably be good to have a theme changer -- maybe just light and dark to start with. Are the f

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Noeck
Hi Joshua, very nice. The auto-update of the output and the clef and key selection are very intuitive. I'd suggest to add a *save* to file (.ly) option for the save dialog. I did not understand the *tools* dialogs the first time. The clef and key change were easy to understand (for me) the note

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Knute Snortum
Personally I like the dark theme, but yes, it would probably be good to have a theme changer -- maybe just light and dark to start with. Are the functions in the Tools menu supposed to work? I can't figure out how to use them. I like that you can save to GitHub. --- Knute Snortum (via Gmail)

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Paul Scott
On Wed, Jan 03, 2018 at 12:19:04AM -0500, Joshua Netterfield wrote: > Hi all, > > I've been working on an online LilyPond editor in my spare time, and would > appreciate your feedback. You can use it as a scratchpad, or sign in with a > GitHub account to save sheet music directly there. > > Try i

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Karlin High
On 1/2/2018 11:19 PM, Joshua Netterfield wrote: or sign in with a GitHub account to save sheet music directly there. So far, this looks very nice! I like the autocomplete for code and autopreview for results. I've done a little work with LilyBin and mostly liked it. But I could see that peo

Re: Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Martin Tarenskeen
On Wed, 3 Jan 2018, Joshua Netterfield wrote: Hi all, I've been working on an online LilyPond editor in my spare time, and would appreciate your feedback. You can use it as a scratchpad, or sign in with a GitHub account to save sheet music directly there. Try it at https://www.hacklily.or

Introducing Hacklily, another online LilyPond editor

2018-01-03 Thread Joshua Netterfield
Hi all, I've been working on an online LilyPond editor in my spare time, and would appreciate your feedback. You can use it as a scratchpad, or sign in with a GitHub account to save sheet music directly there. Try it at https://www.hacklily.org It's inspired by great projects like LilyBin an