For me googling Opustex and Gregorian, brings up an old page of mine: http://www.hermes.net.au/pvb/opustex.html and another page I wrote: http://www.brandt.id.au/scriptorium/
OpusTeX is no longer maintained. It is very clunky compared to gregorio. More about gregorio at http://www.gregoriochant.org It is under active development on github and there's a huge collection of pre-coded chant at gregobase.selapa.net and you can use it online without having to install anything via illuminare's music engraving app. And it runs on TeX (lualatex to be precise). Now, I just have to think how to write about it for my Saturday ccwatershed post... Veronica On 27 June 2015 at 09:22, Bodo Meissner <b...@bodo-m.de> wrote: > Am 26.06.2015 21 <2606201521>:48 schrieb Andre Van Ryckeghem < > a...@telenet.be>: > > > Perhaps (i hope) this work is useless, because someone else has a easy > way > to make gregorian sheets. > > Hello Andre, > > some years ago I used OpusTeX to produce some sheets of gregorian chants > with lyrics for our local choir. The gregorian support of OpusTeX has a > specific feature to align the neumes with the lyrics where the layout is > mainly defined by the lyrics. > I have to dig up the examples. > You will surely find examples by searching for keywords opustex and > gregorian. > > Bodo > > ------------------------------- > TeX-music@tug.org mailing list > If you want to unsubscribe or look at the archives, go to > http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/tex-music > > -- brandt.id.au
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