Noeck writes:
> Am 17.02.2013 04:09, schrieb David Kastrup:
>> Remove the Fingering_engraver, _and_ add a dummy engraver listening to
>> fingering events and ignoring them. Then New_fingering_engraver will
>> not feel compelled taking over.
>>
>
> Ok, there seems to be a reason for this behavio
Hi all,
while writing this graphical list of objects and engravers:
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/lilypond-user/2013-01/msg00916.html
I wondered, how some engravers are used and how some objects are
produced. Most names are self explaining, but I had some difficulty the
following things:
Engr
Am 17.02.2013 04:09, schrieb David Kastrup:
> Remove the Fingering_engraver, _and_ add a dummy engraver listening to
> fingering events and ignoring them. Then New_fingering_engraver will
> not feel compelled taking over.
>
Ok, there seems to be a reason for this behaviour and a way to deal wi
Nick Payne writes:
> 4 c-4
>
> then if I use
>
> \remove "New_fingering_engraver"
>
> it removes the fingering on the first C (i.e. the chord) and leaves
> the fingering on the second. If I use
>
> \remove "Fingering_engraver"
>
> it doesn't remove the fingering on either note.
Yes, it does. An
On 17/02/13 09:59, Eluze wrote:
Nick Payne-3 wrote
Just curious - the Internals Reference says that fingering is in the
Voice context, but when I remove it I still see fingering. I would have
expected the code below to remove the fingering, but it doesn't. I'd
like to be able to publish a finger
Nick Payne-3 wrote
> Just curious - the Internals Reference says that fingering is in the
> Voice context, but when I remove it I still see fingering. I would have
> expected the code below to remove the fingering, but it doesn't. I'd
> like to be able to publish a fingered score without fingeri
Just curious - the Internals Reference says that fingering is in the
Voice context, but when I remove it I still see fingering. I would have
expected the code below to remove the fingering, but it doesn't. I'd
like to be able to publish a fingered score without fingering for those
who prefer to