Hello David, > If you have text associated with a divisio, for example, the `Ps.' in > the Populus Sion of the web site, then this works fine if it occurs in > the middle of a line. But commonly, as in this case, if it occurs at > the end of a line, then the divisio should be at the end of one line, > and the `Ps.' at the start of the next. (In case it's not clear what > I mean, the Liber Usualis introit for St Stephen, p415, has an > example.) >
I think I see what you mean, and I must admit I've never thought about this issue... This is interesting, but it won't be that easy to deal with... Now I don't see any immediate solution... > Does the gabc notation need to be extended? Should one write: > > ... ves(gxe_f_e_)tri.(e) (::)Ps. Qui(gyehg) ... > > (this sometimes gives the right output when the divisio is at the end > of the line, but it does not when the divisio is in the middle) > Or is there some way of handling this already that I have missed? > There is currently no way of handling this, now one shouldn't write the same thing according to the position of the bar (if it is at the end of line or not). I don't think gabc notation should be extended, this is more a pure TeX issue. Thank you for reporting this, I've made a task out of it, I'll try to work on it! -- Elie _______________________________________________ Gregorio-devel mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/gregorio-devel
