Michael, I've tried it with NewCentury and Palatino, marking it up as you did ( <sp>V/</sp> ) but I get nothing at all:
mode: 0; initial-style: 0; %% (c4)<sp>V/</sp> O(h)rĂ¡te, fra(h)tres,(h) (,)ut(h) me(h)um(h) etc. I'm also tempted to ask how I can use different fonts in my tex file but, researching the question a bit more, have found that it's a minefield (especially for someone like me who's used to using Extensis Suitcase and InDesign!). Thanks for your reply! In the gabc file, I use <sp>V/</sp> for the versicle and and <sp>R/</sp> for the response. For the translation line I use \Vbar and \Rbar, special symbols. The font I use is palatino. I have not had any issues with that setup. As an experiment, I tried a couple of other fonts and they seemed to work as well. What font are you using? I can check it with my setup and see what happens. On 23 March 2010 17:12, Colin Hughes <[email protected]> wrote: > I've been trying unsuccessfully to make the Versicle and Responsory signs > appear in my outputted pdf (using sp markup in the gabc file). When I look > at the pdf there's just a blank space where the sign should be. Is it a > matter of using a specific font in the tex wrapper which has these signs > (such as Arial Unicode MS) or are they present in the fonts packaged with > Gregorio? > > Thanks for reading! > > Colin >
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