Folks,
consider this example:
\version "2.15.37"
\relative c'' {
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
\tempo "a very long tempo string" c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c c c |
c4 c
See attached. Overriding the fingering font works fine for fingering
attached to a note but is ignored when using \finger in a markup, where
the default fingering font is still used.
\version "2.15.37"
\relative c'' {
\override Staff.Fingering #'font-name = #'"Arial Black"
4 cis d\prall^\m
Hi Urs,
On Fri, Apr 27, 2012 at 6:05 PM, Urs Liska wrote:
> Am 27.04.2012 19:30, schrieb David Nalesnik:
>
> Hi Urs,
>
> On Fri, Apr 27, 2012 at 11:46 AM, Urs Liska wrote:
>
>> Hi David,
>>
>> thank you for now. I'll look into it.
>> But isn't it very likely that I have to reshape a slur anyw
On 28 avr. 2012, at 19:48, Peter O'Doherty wrote:
> Hi list,
> After updating my system to Ubuntu 11.10 (although I can't see why this is
> relevant but this is the only change I've made to the system recently), code
> which previously output no error is full of these errors:
>
> warning: progr
On 28 avr. 2012, at 19:19, Mark Mathias wrote:
> Karol,
> I hope someone can help you do what you wish. It's definitely beyond my level
> of expertise. From my point of view on the bug squad, this doesn't look like
> something that needs to be handled by us, so I'm going to suggest that future
Hi list,
After updating my system to Ubuntu 11.10 (although I can't see why this
is relevant but this is the only change I've made to the system
recently), code which previously output no error is full of these errors:
warning: programming error: cyclic dependency: calculation-in-progress
enc
Hey LilyPond users,
I'd like to tell you all about a tour of France and Ireland that my group, the
Ensemble 101, is planning. Aside from using beautifully typeset scores
courtesy of GNU LilyPond, we'll be doing several workshops with composition
students in France and Ireland on contemporary c
Josiah Boothby writes:
> You're not far off, actually, and Wagner did this for his horns and
> trumpets (and Wagner tubas). He knew he was writing extraordinarily
> difficult horn parts for players who were playing technologically new
> instruments, and he knew that early adopters of the valves w