It's been some time but now I finally managed to make a working function.
The suggestion from Kieren was a good starting point but had to be modified
much more than I had expected at first.
Well, here is a short example. I haven't done much testing yet so if something
doesn't work as it should,
gnu.org
> Betreff: Re: Again : notes for toms and floortoms
> Hi L,
>
> > how to make the stencil always associated to some notes?
>
> I believe there is a tip (in the docs or LSR) which shows how to
> colour a notehead based on its pitch -- it should be easy to modify
&g
Hi L,
how to make the stencil always associated to some notes?
I believe there is a tip (in the docs or LSR) which shows how to
colour a notehead based on its pitch -- it should be easy to modify
that code/method to do what you're asking.
Hope this helps!
Kieren.
__
.html
Well, I hope someone capable will provide a way to make this work flawless.
Regards,
Tao
Original-Nachricht
> Datum: Thu, 23 Apr 2009 18:17:22 +0200
> Von: lucifree
> An: Mark Polesky
> CC: Herman , lilypond-user@gnu.org
> Betreff: Again : notes fo
Hi all,
This tip works very well for drums with something like
sn sn \tomNoteHeads tomh tommh toml \normalNoteHeads bd bd
But I wanted to relaunch this thread since there is still an opened
question : how to make the stencil always associated to some notesĀ ?
For example i'd like to put so
Herman vanHaagen wrote:
> Wow!!,
> this is really great. Thanks! Is there a special rum tutorial
> where to figure out this kind of stuff?
Herman,
The LSR (LilyPond Snippet Repository) is a good place to start.
http://lsr.dsi.unimi.it/LSR/Search?
and obviously, the LilyPond docs:
http://lilyp
Herman wrote:
> ... an open circle with a line through it. ...
> I looked in lilypond if this symbol is available, but
> I coudn't find it. Is there a way to generate it?
Yes. Using scheme and postscript, you can generate
your own stencil and substitute your stencil in
place of the default note
Hi All,
I am working on a drumbook using lilypond. I very much like the convention as it
is used by Rick Latham in his books (advanced funk studies, and contemporary
drumset techniques)
Here a tom is an open circle with a line through it. Check this link for qaan
example
http://drummerworld.com/