Le Sun, 01 Jan 2012 05:53:45 +0100, me when.possi...@gmail.com a écrit:C
Is there a way to specify articulation over several notes. Eg., relative c' {
c d e f | g a b c }. I would like to make the first four notes staccato and
the second 4 marcato. Just, clarifying, I understand that I can
On 1 January 2012 04:53, lily-user qroup...@gmail.com wrote:
Is there a way to specify articulation over several notes. Eg., relative c' {
c d e f | g a b c }. I would like to make the first four notes staccato and
the second 4 marcato. Just, clarifying, I understand that I can do
c\staccato
On 1 January 2012 06:12, Carl Sorensen c_soren...@byu.edu wrote:
Note that the Internals Reference (2.2.65 Mark_engraver) indicates that you
need
to move the Staff_collecting_engraver as well in order to have the mark show
up
in the right place.
If you have a look at the attached .ly file
2012/1/1 Gilles gilles.thiba...@free.fr:
Le Sun, 01 Jan 2012 05:53:45 +0100, me when.possi...@gmail.com a écrit:
Is there a way to specify articulation over several notes. Eg., relative
c' {
c d e f | g a b c }. I would like to make the first four notes staccato
and
the second 4 marcato.
Does anyone know how to place an \acciaccatura *before* the barline?
I'm using the following in copying a score, and where the original
shows it before the bar, Lily wants to place it after the barline.
I'm thinking that the original is perhaps musicologically wrong, but
accurate in its intent
On 1 January 2012 21:56, Father Gordon Gilbert fatherg...@gmail.com wrote:
Does anyone know how to place an \acciaccatura *before* the barline?
I'm using the following in copying a score, and where the original
shows it before the bar, Lily wants to place it after the barline.
I'm thinking
After various google searches I finally found out why my lilypond
PNG-files did not contain a transparent background:
A bug in GhostScript introduced in version 8.64
(http://bugs.ghostscript.com/show_bug.cgi?id=690508)
When GhostScript encounters a 'too large' bitmap it enters clist-mode
2012/1/1 Xavier Scheuer x.sche...@gmail.com:
Use the \afterGrace command:
cis' g' a4-\sfz r r2 | r r4 \afterGrace a4( \mf { b16[ cis] } |
d4-.) cis e-. d fis-. b d-. |
It is also explained in NR 1.2.6 Special rhythmic concerns Grace notes
Hi
I'm not-quite-a-beginner with Lilypond trying to engrave a couple of
Christmas carols in three and four parts.
The complication is that I would like to put the verses one after
another for each part, rather than have a single line of text.The only
example of something like it that I've