Putting the <v></v> tag in curly braces did the trick. What I really  
wanted to use this for what to put a cross (\grecross) in the text and  
it works great.

On May 22, 2009, at 6:22 PM, Tracy Llenos wrote:

> On May 22, 2009, at 5:45 PM, Joshua Hayes wrote:
>> Tracy,
>>
>> Thanks for solving my other problem. However...
>>
>> On May 22, 2009, at 5:01 PM, Tracy Llenos wrote:
>>
>>> Instead of
>>> <sp>R/</sp>(::) or s<sp>'ae</sp>(f)cu(f)la(f)
>>> try
>>> <v>\Rbar</v>(::) or s<v>\'\ae</v>(f)cu(f)la(f)
>>> You may also need to use curly braces {} to adjust the centering of
>>> the neumes over the text if you try this.
>>
>>
>> This doesn't work for me. pdflualatex crahses like so:
>>
>> [Loading MPS to PDF converter (version 2006.09.02).]
>> ) (DeusInAdiutorium.tex
>> ! Undefined control sequence.
>> <argument> \Rb
>>              a
>> l.9 }
>>    %
>> ?
>>
>> Any help?
>
> Did you try enclosing the entirety (including the open and close  
> tags) in curly brackets?
> {<v>\Rbar</v>}(::)
>
> So does the standard <sp>R/</sp> notation not work for you either? I  
> just retested a v0.9.2 binary on my laptop, and <sp>A/</sp> <sp>'oe</ 
> sp> etc. work as described on the website (on a Mac; I have to set  
> up a Windows machine to test the cygwin binary), and that would  
> definitely be the easier, and probably more proper, way to write  
> your gabc...
>
>
> Regards,
> --
> Tracy
>


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