Hi Jan-Peter (et al.),
> you can make the BarLine transparent:
> \override BarLine.transparent = ##t
or
\hide BarLine
which saves a few keystrokes. =)
HTH,
Kieren.
Kieren MacMillan, composer
‣ website: www.kierenmacmillan.info
‣ email:
On 01.03.2016 12:09, Jan-Peter Voigt wrote:
you can make the BarLine transparent:
Of course. Much better :-)
Best, Simon
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Greetings Simon, Jan-Peter, and Trevor,
Thank you all for your help; it was most informative, especially as I
will be encountering many like situations going forward with this
project!
Hwaen Ch'uqi
On 3/1/16, Trevor Daniels wrote:
>
> "Simon Albrecht wrote Tuesday,
"Simon Albrecht wrote Tuesday, March 01, 2016 10:37 AM
> On 01.03.2016 11:04, Hwaen Ch'uqi wrote:
>> Greetings All,
>>
>> This is an example from a vocal score for a musical. What is the best
>> way of ensuring that the barline and subsequent measure respects the
>> length of the spoken text
Hi Simon,
great snippet :-)
just a comment - you can make the BarLine transparent:
\override BarLine.transparent = ##t
HTH
cheers
Jan-Peter
Am 01.03.2016 um 11:37 schrieb Simon Albrecht:
\layout {
\context {
\Lyrics
\override BarLine.bar-extent = #'(-0.0001 . 0.0001)
}
}
On 01.03.2016 11:04, Hwaen Ch'uqi wrote:
Greetings All,
This is an example from a vocal score for a musical. What is the best
way of ensuring that the barline and subsequent measure respects the
length of the spoken text rather than the full bar rest?
Add a Bar_engraver to the Lyrics context.
Greetings All,
This is an example from a vocal score for a musical. What is the best
wway of insuring that the barline and subsequent measure respects the
length of the spoken text rather than the full bar rest?
\version "2.18.2"
\score {
<<
\new Voice = "Darcy" \relative c' {
\key