Eventhough I thought I had prevented this it happened :)

That you can rewrite the notehead replacement to any glyph I want does not 
change the fact that it is exactly the glyph/notehead I give it. Once the 
enviroment changes I have to replace all the noteheads. Imagine this for a 
complex piano score where you need this kind of mixed-duration chords. 
Yes, I know I can use variables but its still less elegant than using 
duration-log. 

Nils



On Tue, 26 Apr 2011 06:10:30 -0400
"m...@apollinemike.com" <m...@apollinemike.com> wrote:

> On Apr 26, 2011, at 6:04 AM, Nils wrote:
> 
> > Thank you for your answer. This is what I'm looking for.
> > { <c' e' \tweak #'duration-log #1 g'> }
> > because it respects notehead-styles.
> > 
> > The other method mentioned is limited to one style.
> > 
> 
> The other one can use any glyph you'd like.
> 
> > Do you know how breve and longa can be produced with that? #breve or #0.5 
> > does not give an error, but it also does not work.
> 
> { <\tweak #'stencil #(lambda (grob) (grob-interpret-markup grob (markup 
> #:musicglyph "noteheads.slmensural"))) f' a' c''> }
> 
> You can throw whatever you want in there...
> 
> { <\tweak #'stencil #(lambda (grob) (grob-interpret-markup grob (markup 
> #:musicglyph "clefs.G"))) f' a' c''> }
> 
> Cheers,
> MS
> 

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