Also, thanks Urs! For some reason I saw your response only when checking
out the lists directly, it was not in my mailbox. Honestly I also like the
idea of one voice at a time better, and Frescobaldi helps with seeing it
consistently (as you guys pointed out). Before I saw only "|" at the
beginning in some files, but your "| % bar " is so cool, I'll definitely
try to use that (as the lines are sometimes so long you can't really find
that mark easily). Specifying durations every time is something I'll try
out too, kinda got used to it by using parallel input anyway. Thanks again.

Pozdrawiam,
Krzysztof Gutowski

2017-02-21 12:19 GMT+01:00 kmg <krzysztof.kolor...@gmail.com>:

> Thanks! Actually somehow I never used screen splitting.. now trying it
> out, and it means you have basically \parallelmusic without drawbacks,
> that's really cool. Also with folding Frescobaldi provides, you can hide
> stuff you already completed. I guess you can even split to 4 when working
> on 4 voices and then use another Frescobaldi window just to see preview of
> the score. I'll try that approach next time.
>
> Pozdrawiam,
> Krzysztof Gutowski
>
> 2017-02-21 11:18 GMT+01:00 Federico Bruni <f...@inventati.org>:
>
>> Il giorno mar 21 feb 2017 alle 10:40, kmg <krzysztof.kolor...@gmail.com>
>> ha scritto:
>>
>>> I started to like \pararellmusic, because you can go one measure at a
>>> time, instead of of putting bunch of voices and going back and forth. On
>>> the other hand, it seems like it's limited and you have to restate your
>>> note lengths every time, also some nested slurs can be a problem sometimes.
>>> But it seems like the most clean approach for typesetting something like
>>> baroque sonata for the piano..
>>>
>>>
>> Frescobaldi allows to split the editor pane vertically, so you can work
>> on multiple voices (each in a different variable) without having to scroll
>> up and down. This is what I use to do on 2 voices guitar pieces (what I
>> usually typeset).
>>
>>
>>> Last thing - I saw some putting barchecks in the beginning of the line
>>> (including the very first bar). Are you doing it like that too?
>>>
>>
>> No, I don't.
>> In general I use one line per measure; each measure ends with a barcheck.
>> If the measure is long, I let Frescobaldi wrap lines (View>Wrap lines).
>> If the measure contains tweaks or overrides, I nest them using two
>> spaces. Even though using Frescobaldi format tool makes this nesting
>> disappear; so you have to be careful (and use version control like git).
>> See these two discussions:
>> https://github.com/wbsoft/frescobaldi/issues/573
>> https://github.com/wbsoft/frescobaldi/issues/437
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
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