2017-08-20 16:03 GMT+02:00 Bob Tennent :
> Hi all. Could someone explain what \upzst is intended
> to mean? Surely not staccato *and* tenuto, which is a
> contradiction.
Mezzo-staccato, also called portato.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portato
---
TeX-music@tug.org ma
, 2017 4:48 AM
> To: Don Simons
> Cc: 'Werner Icking Music Archive'
> Subject: Re: [Tex-music] Staccato and tenuto above the staff
>
> >|Andre has provided an example that highlights the >|following
"feature":
> If you try to put \lpz or \lst above &
Hi all. Could someone explain what \upzst is intended
to mean? Surely not staccato *and* tenuto, which is a
contradiction. On a string instrument pizzicato-tenuto
makes sense: pluck the string and then hold the note: i.e.,
pizzicato which is *not* staccato. But on other kinds of
instrument? On a ha
>|Here is a simple workaround:
>|
>|\Notes\ibu1h2\ust o\upz n\qb1h\ust p\upz o\qb1i%
>|\ust q\upz p\tbu1\qb1j\ibu1k2\ust r\upz q\qb1k%
>|\ust s\upz r\qb1l\ust t\upz s\tbu1\qb1m\en%
Even better is to use \upzst:
\Notes\ibu1h2\upzst n\qb1h\upzst o\qb1i%
\upzst p\tbu1\qb1j\ibu1k2\upzst q\qb1k%
>|Andre has provided an example that highlights the
>|following "feature": If you try to put \lpz or \lst above
>|the staff, you are restricted to every other vertical
>|position. The same is not true of \upz or \ust.
The \lpz and \lst are there, but the former are masked by
the latter, whose
Andre has provided an example that highlights the following "feature": If
you try to put \lpz or \lst above the staff, you are restricted to every
other vertical position. The same is not true of \upz or \ust. Here is a PMX
file that generates the pasted example.
==
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