input to lyrics.
to be honest, i tried it, and i'm back now to "normal" input with one file
for every voice/lyric/dynamics/...
but maybe your aproach will find approvers!
regards
Eluze
--
View this message in context:
http://old.nabble.com/Mixing-notation-and-lyric-entry-tp30
nd can fix the ones I do make
>> > faster if the lyrics are close to the notation. As it is now, I have
>> > to re-enter (cut, paste & edit) the lyrics in a separate \lyricmode
>> > block. Any suggestions for how to write the \withLyrics function? Or
>> > is
g clean solution I haven't found yet?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Mike
> >
> >
>
> imo it is a question of synchronising & visualising the input of 2 ore more
> "voices" (in a general way)
>
> one way is to put both in a table, the first r
zed files (in vertical scrolling); that
way you could have the melody in the left and the lyric text in the right
window (which are both included somewhere in your main score).
(of course you can also use one line per measure)
hope these ideas are helpful!
Eluze
--
The following does what I want but requires explicit variables that have to
be manually concatenated. There's got to be a way to reduce the overhead.
After all, Scheme is the most powerful language in the known universe,
right?
\include "english-solfa.ly" % english.ly modified to include solfa s
2010/12/15 Michael Ellis >
> Jan Warchol wrote "I don't know how it could be done, and i strongly
> recommend not doing
> this. Separating different types of content is in my opinion very
> beneficial"
> I agree that separating content is useful. As you point out, it allows one
> to easily recom
Jan Warchol wrote "I don't know how it could be done, and i strongly
recommend not doing
this. Separating different types of content is in my opinion very
beneficial"
I agree that separating content is useful. As you point out, it allows one
to easily recombine it in various formats. It's just t
Hi,
2010/12/14 Michael Ellis :
> Is there a clean way to enter a phrase followed by the corresponding notes
> in a \relative block? The example given in the docs,
>
> {
> \time 3/4
> \relative c' { c2 e4 g2. }
> \addlyrics { play the game }
> }
>
> is fine for a small example, but it gets m
> "Michael" == Michael Ellis writes:
Michael> Any suggestions for how to write the \withLyrics function?
Michael> Or is there an existing clean solution I haven't found yet?
I always used to wish for that, and then I figured out how to use
point-and-click and I don't need it any more
Is there a clean way to enter a phrase followed by the corresponding notes
in a \relative block? The example given in the docs,
{
\time 3/4
\relative c' { c2 e4 g2. }
\addlyrics { play the game }
}
is fine for a small example, but it gets messy for longer music. I
do a lot of transcribin
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