Oh, I should point out that because of the doubling induced by the tab stop 
definition in the gabc, the tab stop must be its own syllable, otherwise you'll 
get doubling in the notes and/or text.  Pay close attention to the structure of 
my gabc file.

✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝
Br. Samuel, OSB
(R. Padraic Springuel)
PAX ☧ ΧΡΙΣΤΟΣ

> On Mar 3, 2015, at 4:58 PM, Br. Samuel Springuel <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> I decided to try and play with something to achieve this effect and got 
> something that sort of works.
> 
> Basically I tried including the gabc score within a tabbing environment, 
> adding the tabbing declarations to the score, and then using them to line up 
> the text below.  It doesn't completely work.  Each tab stop is defined twice 
> (necessitating \>\> in the text where one would expect \>) and it latex to 
> raise some errors to appear in the typesetting the score, but they appear to 
> be ignorable, as I get some results that aren't bad.
> 
> I'm not sure this is the best solution, but it does require far less fiddling 
> with distances.  Check out the attached to see what I've got.
> 
> The best solution would probably be to develop a macro which would calculate 
> how far it is from the left margin (or edge of the paper, either would do) 
> and create a distance storing that value.  This macro could then be placed in 
> the gabc where you wanted the alignment points to be.  Judicious use of a 
> \kill line in a tabbing environment could then employ those distances to 
> define tab stops at the right positions.  In this fashion, the score wouldn't 
> be inside a tabbing environment (something which appears to be somewhat 
> problematic).
> 
> ✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝✝
> Br. Samuel, OSB
> (R. Padraic Springuel)
> 
> PAX ☧ ΧΡΙΣΤΟΣ
> <Archive.zip>

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