Hi Dennis--

I've seen them two places -- directly under the title (typically in solo
vocal pieces) and right next to the corresponding vocal line before the
staff name (choral pieces). They have the clef, five line staff, a solid
notehead that designates the lowest note sung in a part followed by the
highest note sung by the part, with a straight line glissando in
betweeen.

I suggest TIFF files, although here's what I've done in the past:

Insert a bar at the beginning. (You'll have to adjust measure # regions)
Hide it's barline.
Enter low note and high note
Use the Tab slide tool and put in the straight line gliss.
Use a hide staff staff style to hide a chunk of this measure
Force the clef/key/time to show in the real measure 1
Adjust the brackets and staff names to appear in the correct place.

I don't know if a PI could do it...

You could also create them as a separate system or as Ossias

Allen


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of d. collins
Sent: Friday, May 07, 2004 7:11 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Finale] Range finders


Hi folks,

I've been asked to add "range finders" to some vocal pieces, and have 
several questions:
- where exactly do they belong? and what should they look like?
- what's the easiest way of doing them in Finale?
- wouldn't this be a typical suggestion for a plug-in?

Thanks,

Dennis 

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