> Christopher Smith composed the following.
> On Feb 19, 2008, at 5:33 PM, dhbailey wrote:
>>
>> And here all my teachers told me there were no stupid questions. :-(
>
> That's what I say to MY students. "There are no stupid questions.
> Only stupid students."
>
> 8-)
>
> Christoph
> dhbailey composed the following.
> Robert Patterson wrote:
>> Well, I wouldn't go so far as to say it is a stupid question. But it
>> is a question that whose answer is very individual.
>>
>> The only reason I chime in here is to mention that if you are not
>> making full use of 3rd-
Yep. agree whole heartedly. And in trying give both a fair
"hearing".. ala rather than saying Oh bugger Finale doesn't do this well
or Sibelius as crap at that.. They should give both a complete se of
"test run" and see in reality which overall works best.. Both will have
advantages and both wi
> Christopher Smith composed the following.
> On Feb 19, 2008, at 7:23 PM, Adam Golding wrote:
>
>> yeah i indeed tried the macro route for awhile--setting things up on
>> finale with autohotkey and whatnot--mind you, i could never find an
>> easy way to enter smartshapes from the keyb
TGTools is really what makes Finale shine. I can't imagine using
Finale without it.
On 2/19/08, Darcy James Argue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What, specifically, is slowing you down in Finale? My general
> impression is that Sibelius is still somewhat easier to learn, but
> expert Finale users
*Yawn*
Yeah, you go Bob..
On 2/19/08, Bob Morabito <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Well said, David..
>
> Peace, Bob Morabito
>
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Darcy James Argue wrote:
What, specifically, is slowing you down in Finale? My general impression
is that Sibelius is still somewhat easier to learn, but expert Finale
users can work more quickly and more efficiently, especially if you make
full use of third-party plugins.
Back when I was a r
What, specifically, is slowing you down in Finale? My general
impression is that Sibelius is still somewhat easier to learn, but
expert Finale users can work more quickly and more efficiently,
especially if you make full use of third-party plugins.
Back when I was a regular Sibelius user (v
Well said, David..
Peace, Bob Morabito
On Feb 19, 2008, at 7:26 PM, dhbailey wrote:
Eric Dannewitz wrote:
Exactly. That is why it was a stupid question.
I have no idea why some people are getting their knickers in a
twist over a simple question -- it's not like he insulted anybody's
On Feb 19, 2008, at 4:26 PM, dhbailey wrote:
If you don't like a question, hit the delete key. It does nobody
any good to say "that's a stupid question."
I have asked a number of questions here that might have seemed (or
been) stupid to anyone with more experience with the issue than
On Feb 19, 2008, at 4:23 PM, Adam Golding wrote:
On the other hand, maybe i'm just so
addicted to keyboard shortcuts that I can't realize that using the
mouse
*could* be fast too? I have the same issues with removing
articulations.
Not to dissuade you from keyboard shortcuts, but the
On Feb 19, 2008, at 7:23 PM, Adam Golding wrote:
yeah i indeed tried the macro route for awhile--setting things up
on finale
with autohotkey and whatnot--mind you, i could never find an easy
way to
enter smartshapes from the keyboard--i think i would have to learn the
actual plugin language
Owain Sutton wrote:
Eric Dannewitz wrote:
Exactly. That is why it was a stupid question. One really
needs to try
them out and come to their own conclusions based on how
they do things.
And here all my teachers told me there were no stupid questions. :-(
In defense of the question, he's real
> Eric Dannewitz wrote:
> > Exactly. That is why it was a stupid question. One really
> needs to try
> > them out and come to their own conclusions based on how
> they do things.
> >
>
> And here all my teachers told me there were no stupid questions. :-(
>
> In defense of the question, he's
On Feb 19, 2008, at 5:33 PM, dhbailey wrote:
And here all my teachers told me there were no stupid questions. :-(
That's what I say to MY students. "There are no stupid questions.
Only stupid students."
8-)
Christopher
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Robert Patterson wrote:
Well, I wouldn't go so far as to say it is a stupid question. But it
is a question that whose answer is very individual.
The only reason I chime in here is to mention that if you are not
making full use of 3rd-party plugins, and also using a 3rd-party
keyboard macro progr
Eric Dannewitz wrote:
Exactly. That is why it was a stupid question. One really needs to try
them out and come to their own conclusions based on how they do things.
And here all my teachers told me there were no stupid questions. :-(
In defense of the question, he's really asking for opinio
Well, I wouldn't go so far as to say it is a stupid question. But it
is a question that whose answer is very individual.
The only reason I chime in here is to mention that if you are not
making full use of 3rd-party plugins, and also using a 3rd-party
keyboard macro program, you have no idea how f
Exactly. That is why it was a stupid question. One really needs to try
them out and come to their own conclusions based on how they do things.
Steve Currington wrote:
I can't answer based on current experiences or should I say products but
I think the answer is .. it depends on how you work and
I can't answer based on current experiences or should I say products but
I think the answer is .. it depends on how you work and your mental
processes - some of which can be modified and some is inherent in ones
personality or inbred work habits.
I have both (NB I have not upgraded to the recent r
Adam Golding wrote:
Eric,
I have used both Sibelius and Finale. Sibelius is currently faster for me,
but I know it somewhat better than Finale---further practice on finale might
make it faster for me, on the other hand, further practice might be futile.
I agree that each program will produce d
Well, if finale could potentially be faster, it might be worth it. Users
who have used both extensively and prefer finale might have some valuable
workflow insights in their explanation as to why finale is faster for them.
On 19/02/2008, Eric Dannewitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Then stick wi
Then stick with Sibelius. You really don't need to use TWO different
programs to do notation. It would be like learning Logic and Cubase.
On 2/18/08, Adam Golding <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Eric,
>
> I have used both Sibelius and Finale. Sibelius is currently faster for me,
> but I know it some
Eric,
I have used both Sibelius and Finale. Sibelius is currently faster for me,
but I know it somewhat better than Finale---further practice on finale might
make it faster for me, on the other hand, further practice might be futile.
I agree that each program will produce different creative resu
But people work differently, so, say you have two people who are
fluent in both, but one thinks better doing things like Finale does
it, and the other thinks like how Sibelius thinks.
It is really a lame question. What you really need to do, if you are
really interested in it, is to download both
Not in the slightest. Suppose that someone is maximally fluent in both
programs--that is to say, they use each program as fast as humanly
possible. It doesn't follow that they use each program at the same speed,
since the maximum humanly possible speed might be different for each
program. I'm pr
Wouldn't being fluent in one or the other or both really make it a moot point?
On 2/18/08, Adam Golding <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Can anyone fluent in both Finale 2008 and Sibelius 5 comment on which is
> actually faster to work in? If one isn't trying to create publishable
> scores, but mere
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