One hackers solution would be to create a white rectangle using
a text script with \markup{\whiteout{...}} (I haven't thought of the
details). If you are lucky, this rectangle
will be typeset after (i.e. on top of) the hairpin.

  /Mats

Quoting Trevor Bača <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

On 11/20/06, Orm Finnendahl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,

sorry to bug the list with all these questions, but the score needs to
get finished urgently. At least I'm advancing, having finished one
line of a violin solo piece (5 bars) today in just 10 hours continous
work ;-) Contemporary music notation just sucks, but at least it's a good
test case for the program.

Is there a way to interrupt a crescendo hairpin for a specified amount
of time (like in the \startStaff \stopStaff example). Something to
blank out some part of the hairpin...

Hi Orm,

I know what you're looking for with the interrupted hairpin, but,
unfortunately, I'm pretty sure there is *not* currently a way to do
this. I'd definitely be interested in hearing about it if you do
discover a way, however.

Also, if the contemporary score you're working on turns out well (and
if there aren't personal or copyright issues) it might be interesting
to publish a finished snippet or two back to the list as a successful
example of contemporary notation with Lily. (Of course the composer
might object, but it can't hurt to check.)

Good luck with the hairpins.

--
Trevor Bača
[EMAIL PROTECTED]






_______________________________________________
lilypond-user mailing list
lilypond-user@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user

Reply via email to