- Original Message -
From: Michael Ellis
I'm not having much luck reducing it down to a minimal example. I have
family visiting for the next few days, so I'll try to pick it back up
after Christmas.
Cheers and happy holidays to all!,
Mike
Michael,
Did you make any progress
On Fri, Feb 11, 2011 at 8:53 AM, Phil Holmes m...@philholmes.net wrote:
Michael,
Did you make any progress with creating a Tiny example of this issue?
No. I tried for a while and then decided to let it sleep. It's not
impacting the things I'm currently doing with LilyPond. Thanks for
Hi Jakob,
I'm not having much luck reducing it down to a minimal example. I have
family visiting for the next few days, so I'll try to pick it back up after
Christmas.
Cheers and happy holidays to all!,
Mike
On Thu, Dec 23, 2010 at 4:28 PM, jakob lund jakob.be...@gmail.com wrote:
2010/12/23 Michael Ellis michael.f.el...@gmail.com:
I'm clearly Scheme challenged. I've spent several hours trying different
variations of the following.
#(define (note? x)
(eq? 'EventChord (ly:music-property x 'name)))
#(define notesOnly
;; Remove anything that is not a note.
Le 22/12/2010 16:08, Michael Ellis a écrit :
Carl, thanks for taking the time to figure it out! I really appreciate the
help. It's good to know there's a workaround.
I'm undertaking a project to produce files containing all the Bach Chorales
with solfege syllables (movable Do, La-based
Thanks, Jakob! I didn't understand that a music-filter acts recursively on
containers and their contents. I had some vague notion that it simply
passed or rejected elements at the top level of a list. Your example is
what I needed. For my purposes I needed to add RestEvent and
TransposedMusic
Hi Phil! Thanks for the encouragement. I'll try to respond to all your
questions later, but for now here's the python script I used to invoke
MuseScore (command line name is mscore) on the files I downloaded from
Margaret Greentree's site. I'm running on a Mac with OS 10.6 so this should
work on
Le 23/12/2010 18:05, Michael Ellis a écrit :
Hi Phil! Thanks for the encouragement. I'll try to respond to all your
questions later, but for now here's the python script I used to invoke
MuseScore (command line name is mscore) on the files I downloaded from
Margaret Greentree's site. I'm
2010/12/23 Michael Ellis michael.f.el...@gmail.com:
Thanks, Jakob! I didn't understand that a music-filter acts recursively on
containers and their contents. I had some vague notion that it simply
passed or rejected elements at the top level of a list. Your example is
what I needed. For my
Carl, thanks for taking the time to figure it out! I really appreciate the
help. It's good to know there's a workaround.
I'm undertaking a project to produce files containing all the Bach Chorales
with solfege syllables (movable Do, La-based minor) under each part. I'm
starting with the
On 12/22/10 8:08 AM, Michael Ellis michael.f.el...@gmail.com wrote:
Putting this together with your workaround produces the code and output shown
below. This works quite well. So the issue I'm wrestling with now is whether
it's feasible to automate the editing of 400+ files to separate the
Thanks, Carl. This looks promising ...
Cheers,
Mike
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 10:46 AM, Carl Sorensen c_soren...@byu.edu wrote:
On 12/22/10 8:08 AM, Michael Ellis michael.f.el...@gmail.com wrote:
Putting this together with your workaround produces the code and output
shown
below. This
I'm clearly Scheme challenged. I've spent several hours trying different
variations of the following.
#(define (note? x)
(eq? 'EventChord (ly:music-property x 'name)))
#(define notesOnly
;; Remove anything that is not a note.
(define-music-function (parser location music) (ly:music?)
Oops wrong image for ok.png in previous msg.
Cheers,
Mike
On Tue, Dec 21, 2010 at 7:12 PM, Michael Ellis michael.f.el...@gmail.comwrote:
While working with a much larger version of the score below (BWV 206
chorale in 4 voices), I tried using the NoteNames engraver to put note
names under
On 12/21/10 5:14 PM, Michael Ellis michael.f.el...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Dec 21, 2010 at 7:12 PM, Michael Ellis michael.f.el...@gmail.com
wrote:
While working with a much larger version of the score below (BWV 206 chorale
in 4 voices), I tried using the NoteNames engraver to put note
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