I guess I don't understand the difference between "Hide Key Sig + Show All Accis" and "Keyless (i.e. Chromatic) Transposition". When would you use one or the other?
On Wed, Jul 30, 2014 at 12:44 PM, David Froom <dfr...@smcm.edu> wrote: > Hi Robert, > > With "Hide Key Sig" in the staff options, whatever you are hiding is > reflected in the notes. That is, if you are hiding 2 sharps, you won't see > C# or F# showing up. That's why we needed to use chromatic transposition. > With the Show All Accidentals, it assumes that you have a keyless > signature, and no matter what might be lurking in the background (say, 2 > sharps for an instrument in Bb when you are showing the sharpless/flatless > C key sig), those notes will, when entered, show the sharps. > > It still assumes that you don't want repeated accidentals when you repeat > the note in the same measure in the same register. You still have to use a > plug-in, or go through and choose your own cautionaries (I still haven't > seen a good cautionary plug in that works the way I'd want it to work). > But, for keyless scores, this one button saves a tiny bit of work during > score setup. > > David > > On 30 Jul 2014, at 1:00 PM, <finale-requ...@shsu.edu> wrote: > > > Hide Key Sig was there as a staff option, but I don't believe Show All > > Accidentals was. How does that work? > > > _______________________________________________ > Finale mailing list > Finale@shsu.edu > https://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale > > To unsubscribe from finale send a message to: > finale-unsubscr...@shsu.edu > _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list Finale@shsu.edu https://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale To unsubscribe from finale send a message to: finale-unsubscr...@shsu.edu