Hello, On 21 January 2012 22:22, Xavier Scheuer <x.sche...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 21 January 2012 23:06, James <pkx1...@gmail.com> wrote: >> Well if you look in >> http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.14/Documentation/notation-big-page.html#custom-headers-footers-and-titles >> >> It explains things, although not specifically how to do this, but >> using the information here and information from ly:titling-init.ly >> file which defines many of these rules for how book and score part >> titles work. >> >> I came up with a bit of a crude method that might be good enough for you. >> >> I've attached your file with my modifications here: >> >> but basically with a bit of trial and error I commented out the >> print-all-headers in your \paper { } block, added the scoreTitleMarkup >> = \markup { .. } block within your \paper. This variable is taken from >> the ly:titling-init.ly directly and then I modified it. > > OK, I did not follow carefully the conversation but what I can say is > that if you mean to modify the footer, you should definitely consider > modifying "oddFooterMarkup", not "scoreTitleMarkup".
Yes I tried that but it would not print the copyright on every page only the first. I couldn't find a 'print-all-pages' type variable that I could try, and if you have an even number of scores or if your score moves over a page, then the copyright would be skewed - you'd miss one unless you then have odd and even footer, but again even allowing for that I couldn't get copyright on every page unless it was using scoreTitleMarkup. It seems that taglines and copyright are less flexible outside of the \score { \header {}} construction. > > A solution involving a defined variable (called "thisScoreCopyright" > for instance) that would be then called in oddFooterMarkup should be > possible. > > >> Now the 'hack' was to add the two \fill-line { \null } lines inside >> the scoreTitleMarkup as I couldn't workout how to move the score title >> away from the main title - just add more instances of this \fill-line >> to add more 'line space'. > > There is the \vspace command to add vertical space. Thanks. I didn't think of that. -- -- James _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user