On Jun 9, 2006, at 12:45 PM, Andrew Stiller wrote:
The traditional solution, which produces even cleaner results, is to
extract the entire score into a part
Ooh, that's very good!
I'll be sure to try that next time.
(Traditional, huh? There are even traditions of how to deal with
file
I have received this question from my composer colleague with whom I work
on engraving projects with. I can only passalong his own description
of the problem because he is using Finale 2006 and I have not yet been able to
upgrade from 2003. Apparently, he has a couple of quarter rests that
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have received this question from my composer colleague with whom I
work on engraving projects with. I can only pass along his own
description of the problem because he is using Finale 2006 and I have
not yet been able to upgrade from 2003. Apparently, he has a
Try double-clicking on a rest with the selection tool. If the rest is
not within staff lines (which is apparently the case here) you will
find that this action selects the rest in Simple entry, automatically
switching to the appropriate layer if necessary: you can now move it
(with arrow
On Jun 9, 2006, at 9:13 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have received this question from my composer colleague with whom I work on engraving projects with. I can only pass along his own description of the problem because he is using Finale 2006 and I have not yet been able to upgrade from 2003.
On Jun 9, 2006, at 10:41 AM, Christopher Smith wrote:
For case of VERY bad corruption (I have had this before) sometimes you
have to copy the contents to a new, blank document. This, of course,
is a last resort, and even then doesn't always work, as sometimes the
corrupted information is
On Jun 9, 2006, at 12:45 PM, Andrew Stiller wrote:
On Jun 9, 2006, at 10:41 AM, Christopher Smith wrote:
For case of VERY bad corruption (I have had this before) sometimes
you have to copy the contents to a new, blank document. This, of
course, is a last resort, and even then doesn't