On Sep 9, 2012, at 12:24 PM, David Kastrup wrote:
> james writes:
>
>>Ok, here is the deal: this is an override, which is something
>>happening at a single timestep to _everything_ in the current
>>context. If you want to combine them, you rather want a tweak,
>>which is somethi
james writes:
> Ok, here is the deal: this is an override, which is something
> happening at a single timestep to _everything_ in the current
> context. If you want to combine them, you rather want a tweak,
> which is something with its effect confined to what you are
> tweaki
On Sep 9, 2012, at 9:49 AM, David Kastrup wrote:
>
> Note that you can write this as
>
> rinforzamf =
> #(make-dynamic-script
> #{ \markup \line { \left-align \normal-text \whiteout
>\italic "rinforza"
> \hspace #0
> \whiteo
james writes:
> I don't really understand it, but I can modify the examples of how to create
> custom dynamics to get what I want.
> I have a document with several examples like:
> rinforzamf = #(
>make-dynamic-script (
> markup #:line (
> #:left-align
> #:normal-text
>
On Sep 7, 2012, at 1:48 AM, David Nalesnik wrote:
> Hi James,
>
> On Thu, Sep 6, 2012 at 5:00 PM, james wrote:
>> I don't really understand it, but I can modify the examples of how to create
>> custom dynamics to get what I want.
>> I have a document with several examples like:
>> rinforzamf =
Hi James,
On Thu, Sep 6, 2012 at 5:00 PM, james wrote:
> I don't really understand it, but I can modify the examples of how to create
> custom dynamics to get what I want.
> I have a document with several examples like:
> rinforzamf = #(
>make-dynamic-script (
> markup #:line (
>
I don't really understand it, but I can modify the examples of how to create
custom dynamics to get what I want.
I have a document with several examples like:
rinforzamf = #(
make-dynamic-script (
markup #:line (
#:left-align
#:normal-text
#:whiteout
#:italic "rinf