Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-04 Thread Robin Bannister
Rodolfo Zitellini wrote: and I can't use \tweak (the notation manual states quite clearly that accidentals can not be modified with \tweak) You mean at the end of Notation Reference 5.3.4. Well, it used to be quite categorical on this, e.g in the 2.12.1 docs. Last year Mark Polesky found ou

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-04 Thread Marc Hohl
Am 04.11.2010 11:29, schrieb Phil Holmes: - Original Message - From: "Marc Hohl" To: Cc: Sent: Thursday, November 04, 2010 8:54 AM Subject: Re: Resizing accidental in a chord Am 03.11.2010 17:25, schrieb Toine Schreurs: I looked into the internals and tried \key b \major

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-04 Thread James
On 03/11/2010 19:07, David Kastrup wrote: There are several places in the docs where you can find the override > technique, including the LSR: > e.g. Hm. ? Suggestions always welcome David if you think we can improve this for our users. James __

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-04 Thread Phil Holmes
- Original Message - From: "Phil Holmes" To: "Marc Hohl" ; Cc: Sent: Thursday, November 04, 2010 10:29 AM Subject: Re: Resizing accidental in a chord - Original Message - From: "Marc Hohl" To: Cc: Sent: Thursday, November 04, 2010

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-04 Thread Phil Holmes
- Original Message - From: "Marc Hohl" To: Cc: Sent: Thursday, November 04, 2010 8:54 AM Subject: Re: Resizing accidental in a chord Am 03.11.2010 17:25, schrieb Toine Schreurs: I looked into the internals and tried \key b \major \override Voice.AccidentalSuggestion #

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-04 Thread Marc Hohl
Am 03.11.2010 17:25, schrieb Toine Schreurs: I looked into the internals and tried \key b \major \override Voice.AccidentalSuggestion #'font-size = #-5 4 but this didn't work as expected and I don't know why. What about making cautinary accidentals and: \override Voice.AccidentalCautionar

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread David Kastrup
Kieren MacMillan writes: > Hi Rodolfo, > >> You write and then despair finding in the documentation >> about how to change the accidental suggestion style to a smaller >> version instead of parentheses. > > David's correct... except the "despair" part, which is apparently his > default mode. ;)

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread Phil Holmes
- Original Message - From: "Rodolfo Zitellini" Cc: Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 2010 5:15 PM Subject: Re: Resizing accidental in a chord We do actually have one: http://lsr.dsi.unimi.it/LSR/Item?id=155 Actually this is not quite the same thing. Showing a tweak to sho

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread Kieren MacMillan
Hi Rodolfo, > You write and then despair finding in the documentation > about how to change the accidental suggestion style to a smaller > version instead of parentheses. David's correct... except the "despair" part, which is apparently his default mode. ;) There are several places in the docs

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread Rodolfo Zitellini
>> We do actually have one: >> >> http://lsr.dsi.unimi.it/LSR/Item?id=155 > > Actually this is not quite the same thing. > > Showing a tweak to show 'smaller' accidentals would be useful to others. So > I think we could probably 'update' this LSR snippet (rather than create a > new one) to include

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread James
Hello, sorry for replying to my own thread. On 03/11/2010 17:04, James wrote: Hello, On 03/11/2010 16:46, Phil Holmes wrote: Hi Toine, you actually anticipated me by a few minutes :) Yes overriding AccidentalCautionary is the best solution, I feel quite ashamed for not figuring this myself (a

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread James
Hello, On 03/11/2010 16:46, Phil Holmes wrote: Hi Toine, you actually anticipated me by a few minutes :) Yes overriding AccidentalCautionary is the best solution, I feel quite ashamed for not figuring this myself (and I would have used quite fewer \overrides in may score!) If someone is interes

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread Phil Holmes
Original Message - From: "Rodolfo Zitellini" Cc: Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 2010 4:35 PM Subject: Re: Resizing accidental in a chord > What about making cautinary accidentals and: \override Voice.AccidentalCautionary #'font-size = #-5 \override Voice.Ac

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread Rodolfo Zitellini
> > What about making cautinary accidentals and: > \override Voice.AccidentalCautionary #'font-size = #-5 > \override Voice.AccidentalCautionary #'parenthesized = ##f > > Toine > Hi Toine, you actually anticipated me by a few minutes :) Yes overriding AccidentalCautionary is the best solution, I

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread Toine Schreurs
> I looked into the internals and tried > \key b \major > \override Voice.AccidentalSuggestion #'font-size = #-5 > 4 > but this didn't work as expected and I don't know why. What about making cautinary accidentals and: \override Voice.AccidentalCautionary #'font-size = #-5 \override Voice.Acciden

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread Marc Hohl
Am 03.11.2010 15:39, schrieb Rodolfo Zitellini: Dear All, The house style of my publisher wants suggested accidentals to be displayed usign a smaller font than "normal" ones. This is done easily overriding the font size for every accidental. BUT how do I do this is a chord? Let's suppose I have a

Re: Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread David Kastrup
Rodolfo Zitellini writes: > Dear All, > The house style of my publisher wants suggested accidentals to be > displayed usign a smaller font than "normal" ones. This is done easily > overriding the font size for every accidental. BUT how do I do this is > a chord? Let's suppose I have a three note

Resizing accidental in a chord

2010-11-03 Thread Rodolfo Zitellini
Dear All, The house style of my publisher wants suggested accidentals to be displayed usign a smaller font than "normal" ones. This is done easily overriding the font size for every accidental. BUT how do I do this is a chord? Let's suppose I have a three note chord And I want the cis to have th