Yes, that I knew (though in scroll view it is command-page up or
down). Thanks for reminding those of us who missed it.
C.
On Nov 22, 2008, at 12:46 AM, Matthew Hindson (gmail) wrote:
If you have a mighty-mouse, you can scroll up/down + left/right.
Very handy indeed. You miss it once to
dc wrote:
I'm editing a piece by Charpentier for which there are two different
endings (about 1 page each). I want to give both so the performer can
choose. What would be the best way to indicate this in the score, with
1. and 2. endings, but without the repeat sign?
Thanks,
Dennis
On 20 Nov 2008 at 9:08, dc wrote:
David W. Fenton écrit:
Simply copy and paste all the bits into one score.
Simply? Er, in my experience, that's not without its problems, such
as lost clef changes and courtesy accidentals that don't transfer and
retranscribe issues and so forth.
On 22 Nov 2008 at 16:16, David W. Fenton wrote:
I think I'm going to use
SharpEye for now and see how bad the pastes are.
Well, it turns out the SharpEye trial allows you to scan multiple
pages, so it seems it's going to work fairly well.
However, I must say the user interface is completely
I have a question regarding the Line Tool.
In one section of the score I'm working on, I've used lines to indicate
ascending/descending slides between tone clusters. I increased the thickness
of the line to reflect the composer's handwritten notation which is more of
a thick black bar than a
Use a custom line for this. It will do exactly what you're after.
(OT: interesting that you seem to use slurs instead of ties between the
long notes)
Matthew
Blake Richardson wrote:
I have a question regarding the Line Tool.
In one section of the score I'm working on, I've used lines to
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of David W. Fenton
Sent: Saturday, November 22, 2008 1:36 PM
To: finale@shsu.edu
Subject: Re: [Finale] SmartScore Lite Problem
On 22 Nov 2008 at 16:16, David W. Fenton wrote:
I think I'm going to use
On 22 Nov 2008 at 17:52, Richard Yates wrote:
Working from a piano plus voice score I found it took me far longer to clean
up errors in SharpEye than entering notes from scratch. Not ready for
primetime yet.
It really depends on your source.
I was processing a PDF with graphics in it, but the