Re: Orphaned and widowed lines in \markuplines - a typography bug!

2009-11-12 Thread Jiri Zurek (Prague)
Nicolas Sceaux wrote: > > Yet, it might have been an artefact of an inappropriate page breaking > algorithm, hence the suggestion, Dear Nicolas, I highly value your suggestions, so I tried with the ly:minimal-breaking immediately after I received your reply. However, the problem persists. Ni

Re: Orphaned and widowed lines in \markuplines

2009-11-11 Thread Nicolas Sceaux
Le 10 nov. 2009 à 07:19, David Kastrup a écrit : Nicolas Sceaux writes: Le 9 nov. 2009 à 11:10, Jiri Zurek (Prague) a écrit : It happens to my scores that when using \markuplines for long texts (more than a page), Lilypond leaves a first or a last line orphaned (single, alone) on a pag

Re: Orphaned and widowed lines in \markuplines

2009-11-10 Thread Jiri Zurek (Prague)
David Kastrup wrote: > > The answer does not fit the question. The question was not about > stacking as much on a page as possible. Quite contrary: it was about > stacking less than possible if it avoids ugly results. > Indeed. Perhaps I was not specific enough. I look for a possibility to i

Re: Orphaned and widowed lines in \markuplines

2009-11-09 Thread David Kastrup
Nicolas Sceaux writes: > Le 9 nov. 2009 à 11:10, Jiri Zurek (Prague) a écrit : > >> >> It happens to my scores that when using \markuplines for long texts >> (more >> than a page), Lilypond leaves a first or a last line orphaned (single, >> alone) on a page. This is normally unwanted in printed >

Re: Orphaned and widowed lines in \markuplines

2009-11-09 Thread Nicolas Sceaux
Le 9 nov. 2009 à 11:10, Jiri Zurek (Prague) a écrit : It happens to my scores that when using \markuplines for long texts (more than a page), Lilypond leaves a first or a last line orphaned (single, alone) on a page. This is normally unwanted in printed literature. Is there a way how to in