David B. wrote:
> While the concept of mirrors seems inviting, I find that rarely do I
> ever have EXACTLY the same music in different spots and mentally I do
> better to know I have to actually enter and edit each apparent
> repetition individually. And it makes editing such as you want to do
>
At 11:05 +0100 8/02/2003, LGS-Europe wrote:
But Change Lowest Fret
in MassEdit Menu doesn't work either in a mirrored staff. Nothing seems to
work in a mirrored staff. Perhaps there's a way to 'un-mirror' a staff?
You can change the mirrored measures to normal ones by selecting the
region, then
On 08.02.2003 12:05 Uhr, David H. Bailey wrote
> The only way I know to un-mirror a staff is to simply delete the mirror
> connection. To do this, use the mirror tool and click each mirrored
> measure and click DELETE. It will be time consuming for a lengthy
> piece. It might be quicker and eas
The only way I know to un-mirror a staff is to simply delete the mirror
connection. To do this, use the mirror tool and click each mirrored
measure and click DELETE. It will be time consuming for a lengthy
piece. It might be quicker and easier to simply use the staff-tool and
delete the tab-
David Bailey wrote:
> I am not sure if you ever got a reply, but I just found something that
> might help: You can highlight the tab-staff with mass-mover and go to
> MassEdit menu and select Utility and then select Change Lowest Fret.
> This might actually accomplish what you want to do. Maybe
I am not sure if you ever got a reply, but I just found something that
might help: You can highlight the tab-staff with mass-mover and go to
MassEdit menu and select Utility and then select Change Lowest Fret.
This might actually accomplish what you want to do. Maybe not, I
haven't tried it b
I've entered music in staff and mirrored it to a tab-staff. How do I edit
the mirrored staff? I do not want to change actual notes, just put notes on
different strings with the Simple Entry Tool.
I can copy, of course, but copying does not have the obvious advantages that
mirroring has.
Any help a