Re: articulation question

2010-11-22 Thread M Watts

On 11/21/2010 08:53 AM, Hu Haipeng wrote:

   I'm wondering whether I can enter these articulations: mezzo staccato (dot 
and line),


Just put both after the note: c-.--


reversed accent sing


Not sure what this is...


and martellato (thick V).


If you force the direction of the marcato mark downwards, it points 
down; usually you put c-^, but try c_^ to get thick downwards V.


Or, if you want a thick downwards V above the note, you could try

martellato = \markup { \musicglyph #scripts.dmarcato }

c^\martellato

otherwise if it goes above the note, as in c^^, it points upwards.



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articulation question

2010-11-20 Thread 胡海鹏 - Hu Haipeng
Hello,
  I'm wondering whether I can enter these articulations: mezzo staccato (dot 
and line), reversed accent sing and martellato (thick V). I don't know what a 
portato sign looks like, could anyone describe it?
Regards
Haipeng


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RE: articulation question

2010-11-20 Thread James Lowe
Haipeng,

-Original Message-
From: lilypond-user-bounces+james.lowe=datacore@gnu.org on behalf of ??? - 
Hu Haipeng
Sent: Sat 11/20/2010 22:39
To: lilypond-user
Subject: articulation question
 
Hello,
  I'm wondering whether I can enter these articulations: mezzo staccato (dot 
and line), reversed accent sing and martellato (thick V). 

I don't know what a portato sign looks like, could anyone describe it?



I asked my friend who plays violin and he says Portato is either simply 
staccato on the notes with the same notes slurred

So I guess something like

c(-. d-. e-. f-.)

or a staccato dot over a 'tenuto' symbol.

Hope this helps.

James (a Trumpet player)

 


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