Suppose I have a solo part which can be played either on cello or on
viola da gamba. Cello solo parts are normally written in a mixture of
bass and tenor clefs; gamba parts in a mixture of bass and alto clefs.
In either case it's quite possible to encounter a change of clef every
few bars.
On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 8:53 AM, Christopher Webster
christop...@claytonwebster.net wrote:
What's the most elegant way in which I can enter the notes just once, but
generate two output scores - one with bass and tenor clefs, the other with
bass and alto clefs?
what about separate voices for
Thank you! Of your three proposed solutions, the one with tags looks
like the winner. I didn't know about tags - they look ideally suited.
A feature of your first solution which I would have hoped to avoid is
that you do seem to have duplicated notation - the s1*3 and the s1*2
- in the
Am 16.05.2012 09:30, schrieb Christopher Webster:
Thank you! Of your three proposed solutions, the one with tags looks
like the winner. I didn't know about tags - they look ideally suited.
Yes, that's exactly what they are for.
A feature of your first solution which I would have hoped to
Yes - just to confirm that the tags were exactly what I needed. Here's
the sort of thing I wanted to do:
highClef =
{
\tag #'cello { \clef tenor }
\tag #'gamba { \clef alto }
}
dots = \relative c
{
\clef bass
g'4 a b r
\highClef
d4
Am 16.05.2012 10:30, schrieb Christopher Webster:
Yes - just to confirm that the tags were exactly what I needed.
Here's the sort of thing I wanted to do:
highClef =
{
\tag #'cello { \clef tenor }
\tag #'gamba { \clef alto }
}
dots = \relative c
{
\clef
Urs Liska li...@ursliska.de writes:
No you don't have to edit the ly-file.
You can write sth like:
music = { ... }
myClefI = { \clef tenor }
myClefII = { \clef bass
\score ... % references \music
% and then redefine the variables
myClefI = { \clef treble }
myClefII = { \clef bass
On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 10:30 AM, Christopher Webster
christop...@claytonwebster.net wrote:
It works like a charm. Big thank-you from me.
Glad i helped :)
I see that Urs already answered your questions about paralell voices.
cheers,
Janek
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