- Von meinem Fliewatüüt gesendet.
> On 3 Mar 2014, at 23:31, Simon Albrecht <simon.albre...@mail.de> wrote: > > Am 03.03.2014 23:06, schrieb Schneidy: >> Ok ! >> >> Well, please find herewith a first attempt. >> It's far from perfect; I still cannot find a way to flip all/part of all >> grobs, but it does the job ! >> Since I don't know how to read arabic nor arabic music please forgive my >> poor example >> Cheers, >> ~Pierre >> <http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/file/n160071/Hosam.png> >> Hosam.ly <http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/file/n160071/Hosam.ly> >> >> PS. here's a link you may also be interested in: >> https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/~smrz/elixir-thesis.pdf >> >> >> >> -- >> View this message in context: >> http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/Right-to-Left-tp160055p160071.html >> Sent from the User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> lilypond-user mailing list >> lilypond-user@gnu.org >> https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user > For what I know the point about right-to-left scripts is that the writing > isn't simply mirrored, but the glyphs in themselves remain, only to be > arranged the other way round. Which I think might have to be implemented at a > much more basic level... (In XeTeX this feature is available, so as far as > text is concerned, one might take a solution or ideas from there.) > However this is on text and I don't know anything about music typesetting > conventions. Maybe it's possible to achieve that on the postscript level - something like wrapping the position information around the vertical centre. Although I don't see how the text/music alignment could be achieved as well ... _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user