On 15/04/12 08:29, Richard Chonak wrote:
To follow up: this seems to work, though it's laborious:
Add these lines to the LaTeX document file before the \includescore
invocation:
\definecolor{Blue}{rgb}{0.3,0.3,0.9}
\definecolor{Black}{rgb}{0,0,0}
\definecolor{Green}{rgb}{0.3,0.9.0.3}
And invoke \color in the gabc file, specifying black for neumes and
colors for text:
%%
(c4)To(e)ta(e)
<v>\color{Blue}</v>pul<v>\color{Black}</v>(c)<v>\color{Blue}</v>chra<v>\color{Black}</v>(e)
<v>\color{Blue}</v> es, <v>\color{Black}</v>(g.)
<v>\color{Green}</v>O<v>\color{Black}</v>(g)
<v>\color{Green}</v>Ma<v>\color{Black}</v>(f_e)<v>\color{Green}</v>ri<v>\color{Black}</v>(fg)<v>\color{Green}</v>a,<v>\color{Black}</v>(e_d_)
(,)
--RC
Tx a lot Richard, you got me on the right track.
But for the info of others: I consulted the Latex wiki, and there I
found out that there are predefined colors, so you don't need to define
them. Unless of course you're not entirely happy with the tones. BTW,
the names of the predefined colors are black, red, blue etc. completely
lower case.
Herman Viaene
--
Veel mensen danken hun goed geweten aan hun slecht geheugen. (G. Bomans)
Lots of people owe their good conscience to their bad memory (G. Bomans)
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