Hi,
To generate a complete midi from a score, I need to unfold D.S. al
Coda repeats. Any suggestions how to do this?
-- Johan
___
lilypond-user mailing list
lilypond-user@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
Trevor Daniels wrote:
On 23.09.2007 (02:18), Eyolf Ostrem wrote:
On 22.09.2007 (18:08), Graham Percival wrote:
Great! We have our first claim; Michael
Rasmussen is doing Pitches.
I'll have a look at simultaneous, then.
eyolf
OK, I'll have a bash at the tutorial 2.4 Songs, but
2007/9/21, Trevor Bača [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
In German the word is Tupel vs. Duole, Triole, Pentole etc.
I never really heard Tupel in musical context, only mathemathically.
My musical lexicon doesn't know it - but my favourite online
dictionary doesn't know tuplet either.
Yeah, I may be
Using the before mentioned Unicode font Euterpe and the Unicode
character U+1D19D (written \U1D19D below) in it, I was able to create
an ornament sign similar to \prall (but shorter) using the definition
halfprall=^\markup {\override #'(font-size . 3.5) {\U1D19D}}
However, when combining
2007/9/24, Johan Vromans [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
To generate a complete midi from a score, I need to unfold D.S. al
Coda repeats. Any suggestions how to do this?
There is no automagical way to do it (at least there wasn't when I
asked last time).
Try to split your voives in several parts, assign
2007/9/24, Henning Hraban Ramm [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
As Mark Knoop wrote, (indeed das) Tupel is normally a vector and
as a musical term seems to be as common as tuplet.
For the German tuplets named Duole, Triole, Quartole, Quintole/Pentole
etc. the neologism would have to be die Tupole, but I
Is it possible to get a small note within parenthesis written out
like when using \pitchedTrill, but for say \prall (and if so, how it
is done)?
Hans Åberg
___
lilypond-user mailing list
lilypond-user@gnu.org
On 9/21/07, Graham Percival [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've posted initial instructions for GDP helpers here:
http://opihi.cs.uvic.ca/~gperciva/helper.txt
If somebody could send those to the list (as a reply to this), that
would make it easier for other people to read.
ASIDE: I wouldn't
[Lilypond 2.11.33]
Hello all,
Is there any way to override the indent length of a system mid-score?
Maybe something along the lines of
\overrideProperty #Score.NonMusicalPaperColumn #'line-break-
system-details #'((indent . 15))
[which, of course, doesn't actually work...]
?
Thanks,
2007/9/21, Trevor Bača [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Yeah, I may be spreading unsubstantiated rumours here, but the term
seems definitely to have shown up first in English (rather than FR or
DE) and I *think* it actually originated in an early version of the
Finale user manual (God help us). I've
Eyolf Østrem wrote:
Does this mean that we should consider not using the word? Not that I
have anything against Finale (hehe :-), but do we have to copy their
strange nomenclature? The question is, I suppose:
I've never touched Finale, but I've heard the word tuplet many times
before. It's
Hello!
In the following snipplet I created a connected arpeggio in a piano staff
and transposed both staffs one octave up (8va). The 8va and the arpeggios
collides.
In the following bar the accidentel of the ees colliedes with the bar.
Has anyone any ideas?
Thanks
(windows XP)
\version
Am 2007-09-24 um 14:24 schrieb Valentin Villenave:
In French, no generic term exist; when we translated the documentation
we had to create a rather ugly mathematical word:
since the terms we use are
triolet == meaning triplet
quartolet
quintolet
etc...
We created the
n-olet
which is a
Trevor Bača wrote:
Something like this? These are the closing measures of the first
movement of the Ravel sonatine.
Other than the things you mentioned, looks great. See it in action here:
http://opihi.cs.uvic.ca/~gperciva/lilypond/Documentation/index.html
One note: click on the image, and
Graham Percival wrote:
One concern: is Ravel mutopia-worthy? How long has he been dead? I
hate to ask, but... :(
Wikipedia lists his date of death as 28 Dec 1937, so his music will go
out of copyright in most of the world on 1 January 2008.
To be extra safe, you should stick to music
On 9/24/07, Graham Percival [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Trevor Bača wrote:
Something like this? These are the closing measures of the first
movement of the Ravel sonatine.
Other than the things you mentioned, looks great. See it in action here:
Trevor Bača wrote:
... and looks great to my eyes (minus the slur gripes I mentioned in
the previous mail).
Well, the slur across the key signature looks _awful_... but maybe
that'll encourage new developers to tackle more bugs. :)
Question: is the amount of the Ravel example what you're
2007/9/24, Valentin Villenave [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
In French, no generic term exist; when we translated the documentation
we had to create a rather ugly mathematical word:
since the terms we use are
triolet == meaning triplet
quartolet
quintolet
etc...
In Spanish there is a generic term
I've 56 years old been in music both student or educator for 47 of them and
live in the Northwestern part of the US and until this discussion had never
heard the word tuplet.
Jay
Message: 2
Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2007 12:04:01 -0700
From: Graham Percival [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: tuplets
To:
19 matches
Mail list logo