Thank you kindly, Kieran. I appreciate your time.
I agree about the structure. Thank you for the example. I'll follow that.
Whatever else needs adjusting I'm sure I can force-\tweak into place.
Jakob
On 17.12.2023 15.49, Kieren MacMillan wrote:
Hi Jakob,
Does anyone know how to align Voice
Hi Jakob,
> Does anyone know how to align VoiceOne (green) further left to match the
> horizontal position of VoiceFour (red)?
You could switch the \voiceTwo and \voiceFour commands… but that creates an
even less pleasing result [IMO].
There are also ways to tweak the horizontal position of th
Thank you very much for this clarification, David. That makes a lot of
sense (once you know it.)
On 17.12.2023 02.50, David Kastrup wrote:
\voiceOne is the topmost voice. \voiceTwo is the bottommost voice.
\voiceThree is the voice below \voiceOne. \voiceFour is the voice above
\voiceTwo.
The
+carsonmark=ca.rr@gnu.org
On Behalf Of Jakob Pedersen
Sent: Saturday, December 16, 2023 5:05 PM
To: Lilypond mailing list
Subject: Voices, shifting and stem direction
Greetings!
I've always struggled with multiple voice and getting things to align
correctly. I assume there's
Jakob Pedersen writes:
> Greetings!
>
> I've always struggled with multiple voice and getting things to align
> correctly. I assume there's some basic truth I'm missing.
\voiceOne is the topmost voice. \voiceTwo is the bottommost voice.
\voiceThree is the voice below \voiceOne. \voiceFour is t
Greetings!
I've always struggled with multiple voice and getting things to align
correctly. I assume there's some basic truth I'm missing.
I'm attempting to transcribe an organ chorale and have run into a
problem with these three bars:
I have tried all sorts of combination of \Voice and \