Thanks René! That does the trick. Should have thought of it myself :).
Jon
René Brandenburger wrote:
Hi,
I had the same problem already when moving from 2.10.xx to 2.11.43. I
solved the problem by renaming all .tex files to .lytex and replacing
the \input(foobar.tex) by \input(foobar.lytex)
Hi,
I had the same problem already when moving from 2.10.xx to 2.11.43. I
solved the problem by renaming all .tex files to .lytex and replacing
the \input(foobar.tex) by \input(foobar.lytex)
Hope this helps
best regards
rene
Am Dienstag, den 04.11.2008, 13:48 -0600 schrieb Jonathan Kulp:
Hi
a few question about text spanner bound-details:
1. is it possible to keep the right-broken text inside the system
2. if there is only one note left, the spanner line stops on the first line,
and the right-(broken-) text is printed - probably a bug
3. can the continuation after the break be
I have copied this to devel, as well as to user, because I'd like to get
permission to add the function setHeadColor to ly/music-function-init.ly.
On 11/3/08 5:51 AM, Daniel Cheng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It have some special feature, and I want to replicate it.
See
2008/11/5 Reino Ruusu [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Yes, you definitely need to change the documentation. Is there some simple
alternative way to achieve this?
To achieve what? Typesetting lyrics or rewriting the docs? :-)
I happened to hit this issue while typesetting lyrics to a song, in which
Carl D. Sorensen wrote:
I have copied this to devel, as well as to user, because I'd like to get
permission to add the function setHeadColor to ly/music-function-init.ly.
Sorry for my bad English.
What I was asking is the stem directory (stem up / down),
not the color.
thank you anyway.
- Original Message -
From: Valentin Villenave [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Dany [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: lilypond-user@gnu.org
Sent: Tuesday, November 04, 2008 8:52 PM
Subject: Re: The behavior of a \score block
2008/11/4 Dany [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
... what is the
difference between entering a
Valentin Villenave wrote:
A \score block may include its own \header or a \layout block, whereas
\new Score won't allow you to do so.
\score does not automatically create contexts (whereas \new Score
does) ; therefore you have to create one inside it.
Let me get this straight. If I wanted a