On Fri, 2023-05-12 at 01:44 -0400, Anthony Deaton wrote: > Hi, I am trying to find an adequate replacement for MuseScore 1.3, as > all the subsequent versions have made matters worse and bordering on > impossible for me to use with my workflow. I wanted to know if there > is > anyway in Denemo to add an invisible note,
I wonder here "invisible to whome?". Denemo is a program that aims to make it easy to enter musical scores by visualizing the typeset music on screen as you enter the music. At a most basic level if you typed the letters c d e at your keyboard (or played those notes on a MIDI keyboard) Denemo would display a treble clef, 4/4 time signature, five line stave and those notes as quarter notes on your screen and (rather more slowly) show the same music typeset beautifully in a window ready for printing. It is centered on rapid, error-free, music entry. It does also output a MIDI or audio representation of the music, intended to reassure you that the notes you have entered are the ones you intended. > as I use these for > keyswitches in Musescore connecting to Sfizz via Jack Midi. Also is > there a way to utilize a 2nd and 3rd Jack Midi Port after you have > maxed > out the 16 channels in the first port, as this is a necessity for > large > orchestral works. >From this I'm guessing that "invisible note" means an arbitrary MIDI message inserted into the MIDI output at a certain point in the music. Denemo does indeed allow the user to do this - Denemo does not refer to it as an "invisible note" but as a "Denemo Directive", in this case one directing the insertion of a MIDI message to be inserted into the MIDI output. Because Denemo is highly configurable by the user it would be possible for a user to create an interface for entering such messages via keypresses etc. I don't know of anyone who has implemented such things in Denemo, so this would be unexplored territory. I am happy to help with the mechanics of configuring Denemo to output such messages. HTH Richard > If Denemo won't work for this, do you know of any > other Linux notation editor that could possibly work for me. > > Thank You for Your Time, > > Anthony > >