On 17 Jul 2009, at 16:30, Alex | Brascolor wrote:
my name is alex, and i am from brazil, i would like to know if i can
use lilypond to learn piano music, sort off: i hit a key on my
digital piano
and the program show me where i am hiting, in this way i can load a
song
into lilypond and star
On Sat, Jul 18, 2009 at 10:16:20AM +0200, Hans Aberg wrote:
> On 17 Jul 2009, at 16:30, Alex | Brascolor wrote:
>
> Then LilyPond is a typesetting program. I'm not sure it supports USB
> MIDI-devices (yet), it is possible with some other typesetting programs.
There are several programs that su
On 18 Jul 2009, at 11:13, Martin Tarenskeen wrote:
Lilypond is just a program that creates a printable, viewable, or
playable(=MIDI) score from a text-based inputfile. Nothing more and
nothing less. Direct MIDI/USB support is not relevant. That's what
the third party tools that I mentioned are f
Le samedi 18 juillet 2009 à 04:46 -0700, Graham Percival a écrit :
> There was a request to add the version numbers to pdf files, i.e.
> lilypond-2.13.4.pdf
> lilypond-notation-2.13.4.pdf
>
> If this is easily done in the makefiles, then I think it might be
> a good idea -- but if it's tricky
Adam Good wrote:
> Do I want help with the Hamparsum stuff?? Um, yes please!
I don't see any major obstacles to implementing something like this,
though it may entail quite a bit of work. My first observation is that
it's not quite as simple as the shape-note stuff, since it's clear
that octave
Hi Chris,
Attached is my example that I'm working with. Any help that could
be given would be greatly appreciated.
I think you've just got the wrong approach to the voice
construction... try this:
theMusic = \relative
{
\key fis \major
\clef bass
\time 3/2
1 2 ~ |
<< { \voice
How would I go about making systems smaller so more can fit on the page?
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