Graham Percival wrote:
On Mon, Jan 19, 2009 at 10:53:50PM +0100, Mats Bengtsson wrote:
Jonathan Kulp wrote:
I don't know. This is definitely a strange example. The \mark
command is meant to insert something over a barline, so maybe it'd be
best to delete this example altogether and reword
Graham Percival wrote:
On Mon, Jan 19, 2009 at 10:53:50PM +0100, Mats Bengtsson wrote:
Agreed! It's very rare to insert textual indications between
the notes within a measure (where, on the other hand, it's
not uncommon to attach textual indications to a specific
note, i.e. using a text script).
On Mon, Jan 19, 2009 at 10:53:50PM +0100, Mats Bengtsson wrote:
> Jonathan Kulp wrote:
>> I don't know. This is definitely a strange example. The \mark
>> command is meant to insert something over a barline, so maybe it'd be
>> best to delete this example altogether and reword things a bit so
Jonathan Kulp wrote:
I don't know. This is definitely a strange example. The \mark
command is meant to insert something over a barline, so maybe it'd be
best to delete this example altogether and reword things a bit so that
the example with "colla parte" is the only one illustrating this
Lasse Rempe wrote:
How about "(Reprise)", which is similar to the structural indications
that the \mark command is meant for? Image attached. If this looks
o.k. then I'll make the patch.
I will reiterate my opinion that, in the attached snippet, a reader
would interpret the text to corre
How about "(Reprise)", which is similar to the structural indications
that the \mark command is meant for? Image attached. If this looks
o.k. then I'll make the patch.
I will reiterate my opinion that, in the attached snippet, a reader
would interpret the text to correspond to the beginni
Graham Percival wrote:
On Sun, Jan 18, 2009 at 08:27:52PM +0100, Reinhold Kainhofer
wrote:
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Am Sonntag, 18. Januar 2009 19:32:45 schrieb Lasse Rempe:
In 1.8.1, the following is used as an example for text marks:
c4 \mark "Allegro" c c c
Tempo indi
On Sun, Jan 18, 2009 at 08:27:52PM +0100, Reinhold Kainhofer
wrote:
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>
> Am Sonntag, 18. Januar 2009 19:32:45 schrieb Lasse Rempe:
> > In 1.8.1, the following is used as an example for text marks:
> >
> > c4 \mark "Allegro" c c c
>
> Tempo indication
Reinhold Kainhofer wrote:
No, \mark is mainly used for naming subparts A, B, C, ... These marks are
centered over the bar line.
Cheers,
Reinhold
Yes, I am aware of this (this is the only thing I use it for, in fact).
However, the section in question discusses placing more expansive text
(i.e.
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Am Montag, 19. Januar 2009 02:23:51 schrieb Lasse Rempe:
> Would you consider "Menuetto" / "Trio" as appropriate uses of the \mark
> command? If so, these could perhaps be used in the example.
>
> But even in these cases I would suggest that text in th
Reinhold Kainhofer wrote:
Tempo indications should not use \mark anyway. They should use \tempo
"Allegro" instead. (Mis-)Using \mark in our official documentation is a bug in
my eyes.
For this \mark example I would rather use something like:
c4
\mark "enters the stage"
c c c
Cheers,
Reinhold
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Am Sonntag, 18. Januar 2009 19:32:45 schrieb Lasse Rempe:
> I have a couple of suggestions regardin the (excellent) notation reference.
>
> In 1.8.1, the following is used as an example for text marks:
>
> c4
> \mark "Allegro"
> c c c
Tempo indication
Hi Lasse,
Just a quick note--I'm not the one who wrote the Text section but I can
explain a couple of things.
The documentation policy requires that all examples in the main body of
text be free of \override commands. Examples that have overrides are
added as snippets. Since you have alrea
I have a couple of suggestions regardin the (excellent) notation reference.
In 1.8.1, the following is used as an example for text marks:
c4
\mark "Allegro"
c c c
Here the mark is presumably placed after the first note to give the
appearance that the text stands at the beginning of the bar. In
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