Hello,
some updates.
2010 m. liepos 4 d. 16:34, Antanas Budriūnas rašė:
> Phil,
>
> thanks for the tip.
>
> 2010 m. liepos 4 d. 13:27, Phil Holmes rašė:
>> Would hideNotes do what you want?
>>
>> \relative c' {
>> c4( c) c( \hideNotes c) \unHideNotes
>> }
>
> Looks like a rough workaround. No
2010 m. liepos 5 d. 11:44, Helge Kruse rašė:
> 2010/7/3 Antanas Budriūnas
>>
>> Only few problems remain not solved. One of those:
>> I didn't recall and can't find where recently I was reading about
>> trick for unfinished slur/tie at the end of music fragment.
>
> Do you mention \laissezVibrer
Phil,
thanks for the tip.
2010 m. liepos 4 d. 13:27, Phil Holmes rašė:
> Would hideNotes do what you want?
>
> \relative c' {
> c4( c) c( \hideNotes c) \unHideNotes
> }
Looks like a rough workaround. No.
It involves lilypond-book and certainly not related to lilypond code.
It should look exac
Would hideNotes do what you want?
\relative c' {
c4( c) c( \hideNotes c) \unHideNotes
}
--
Phil Holmes
- Original Message -
From: "Antanas Budriūnas"
To: "lilypond"
Sent: Saturday, July 03, 2010 9:19 PM
Subject: open slur/tie at fragment end
Hi LilyL
Hi LilyList,
finally I went back to music typesetting and am on a halfway of the
"sacred duty" – publishing a book about my grandfather and his
brothers (they all three were composers, choir conductors and
musicologists).
The first acquaintance with LaTeX went well. Especialy I'm grateful
for simp
Bertalan Fodor (LilyPondTool) wrote:
> A hidden note, with tweaked slur positions.
What about a laissez vibrer tie?
http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.13/Documentation/user/lilypond/Writing-rhythms#index-laissez-vibrer
- Mark
___
lilypond-user ma
A hidden note, with tweaked slur positions.
___
lilypond-user mailing list
lilypond-user@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
I have searched the documentation, but could not find a solution for
creating an open ended slur at the end of a repeat. The open ended slur to
indicate that it ties back to the slur at the beginning:
Open ended slur
To tie back to:
Any suggestions?
Thanks,
Robert
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