Thanks to Olivier for starting this list and Richard for adding it to the Wiki — I think it'll be helpful to give people more concrete senses of the great possibilities of Gregorio.
In the case of the Hymnarium, it was produced almost entirely with Gregorio and LaTeX — the only InDesign work involved was the cover. I am very happy that we were able to produce such a large book with LaTeX as the main basis, particularly as it saved a lot of time with the automation of the indexes, the cross references, and so forth. At some point in the coming months, I am hoping to write a description of the lessons I learned about page layout and project management in the process, to help others who might want to undertake similar projects with Gregorio/LaTeX. On Sat, Nov 23, 2013 at 6:24 AM, Olivier Berten <[email protected]>wrote: > Thanks! > > What might also be interesting is a short word about the techniques used. > For instance, Steven Van Roode (who has also typeset the Lumen Christi > Missal and the Simple English Propers) uses Gregorio only for the notes, > then tweaks the result with Illustrator and does the final typesetting with > InDesign. I don't know if all the others do it all with TeX but it might be > interesting to know which flavour they use and maybe some interesting > tricks ;-) Does anybody actually use Scribus? > > Olivier > > > 2013/11/23 Richard Chonak <[email protected]> > >> I've added a list to the Gregorio wiki at >> >> >> http://gregoriochant.org/dokuwiki/doku.php/gregowiki:start?&#works_produced_with_gregorio >> >> --Richard >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Gregorio-users mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/gregorio-users >> > > > _______________________________________________ > Gregorio-users mailing list > [email protected] > https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/gregorio-users > >
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