On 7 May 2018 at 23:59, Thomas Morley wrote:
> 2018-05-07 23:35 GMT+02:00 Gianmaria Lari :
>
> >
> > I tried to write alternative fingering putting fingering numbers on a
> > column. This is what I did:
> >
> > { c' \finger \markup
2018-05-07 23:35 GMT+02:00 Gianmaria Lari :
>
> I tried to write alternative fingering putting fingering numbers on a
> column. This is what I did:
>
> { c' \finger \markup \center-column {2 3}}
>
> But the distance between numbers is a bit too large. Does exist a better
On 5 May 2018 at 22:37, Gianmaria Lari wrote:
>
> On 5 May 2018 at 17:18, Malte Meyn wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> Am 05.05.2018 um 16:33 schrieb Gianmaria Lari:
>>
>>> This is more a notation question than a lilypond question.
>>>
>>> Does exist a standard
On 5 May 2018 at 17:18, Malte Meyn wrote:
>
>
> Am 05.05.2018 um 16:33 schrieb Gianmaria Lari:
>
>> This is more a notation question than a lilypond question.
>>
>> Does exist a standard fingering notation to indicate that a note can be
>> played for example with 2 or 3?
Am 05.05.2018 um 16:33 schrieb Gianmaria Lari:
This is more a notation question than a lilypond question.
Does exist a standard fingering notation to indicate that a note can be
played for example with 2 or 3?
I agree with David and Ralph: put them on top of each other or at
oppisite
On Sat, May 5, 2018, 7:35 AM Gianmaria Lari wrote:
> This is more a notation question than a lilypond question.
>
> Does exist a standard fingering notation to indicate that a note can be
> played for example with 2 or 3? I normally write
>
> \finger "2(3)"
>
> or
>
>
Gianmaria Lari writes:
> This is more a notation question than a lilypond question.
>
> Does exist a standard fingering notation to indicate that a note can be
> played for example with 2 or 3? I normally write
>
> \finger "2(3)"
>
> or
>
> \finger "2/3"
>
>
> but I'm
This is more a notation question than a lilypond question.
Does exist a standard fingering notation to indicate that a note can be
played for example with 2 or 3? I normally write
\finger "2(3)"
or
\finger "2/3"
but I'm not sure this is correct.
Thank you, g.