Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-11 Thread David Kastrup
Klaus Föhl writes: > Olivier Biot wrote: >> If no hyphen is needed, then write "lecker". Otherwise write "lek-ker". > > A manually written hyphen as in lek-ker looks different to lek -- ker, > and then there is the alignment difference when writing lecker _ > >> On a side note, I didn't know thi

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-11 Thread Klaus Föhl
Olivier Biot wrote: > If no hyphen is needed, then write "lecker". Otherwise write "lek-ker". A manually written hyphen as in lek-ker looks different to lek -- ker, and then there is the alignment difference when writing lecker _ > On a side note, I didn't know this German hyphenation variant.

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-11 Thread Klaus Föhl
Alexander Kobel wrote: > I think Klaus did not ask for forcing the hyphen to be visible, > or forcing it to be hidden, but instead choose the letters > depending on whether the hyphen appears or not in that place > (with automatic deduction how cramped the space is). Correct. Nevertheless if a for

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-10 Thread Thomas Morley
2013/3/8 Klaus Föhl : > Hello, > > Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung > feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is "lecker", with hyphen > it is "lek-ker". Using lec -- ker or lek -- ker ( on purpose not le -- cker) > the hyphen may or may not appe

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-10 Thread Janek Warchoł
On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 1:08 AM, Alexander Kobel wrote: > On a different side note, it'd also be really nice if one could specify that > no additional space should be introduced if there is no hyphen. At least > that's how hand-engraved scores seem to do if horizontal space is at a > premium: writ

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-09 Thread Alexander Kobel
On 03/09/2013 06:37 PM, Olivier Biot wrote: On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 6:09 PM, Alexander Kobel mailto:n...@a-kobel.de>> wrote: On 03/08/2013 10:19 AM, Mats Bengtsson wrote: On 03/08/2013 03:52 PM, lilypond-user-requ...@gnu.org wrote:

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-09 Thread Olivier Biot
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 6:09 PM, Alexander Kobel wrote: > On 03/08/2013 10:19 AM, Mats Bengtsson wrote: > >> >> On 03/08/2013 03:52 PM, lilypond-user-requ...@gnu.org wrote: >> >>> Hello, >>> >>> Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung >>> feature ck between two sy

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-08 Thread Alexander Kobel
On 03/08/2013 10:19 AM, Mats Bengtsson wrote: On 03/08/2013 03:52 PM, lilypond-user-requ...@gnu.org wrote: Hello, Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is "lecker", with hyphen it is "lek-ker". Using lec --

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-08 Thread Mats Bengtsson
On 03/08/2013 03:52 PM, lilypond-user-requ...@gnu.org wrote: Hello, Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is "lecker", with hyphen it is "lek-ker". Using lec -- ker or lek -- ker ( on purpose not le -- cker)

Re: lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-08 Thread Janek Warchoł
Hi, On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 2:41 PM, Klaus Föhl wrote: > Hello, > > Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung > feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is "lecker", with hyphen > it is "lek-ker". Using lec -- ker or lek -- ker ( on purpose not le -- cker

lecker lek-ker in "old" German lyrics

2013-03-08 Thread Klaus Föhl
Hello, Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is "lecker", with hyphen it is "lek-ker". Using lec -- ker or lek -- ker ( on purpose not le -- cker) the hyphen may or may not appear. Is there anything beyond tria