Never mind. It's working now, thanks a lot! Good night, Tobias
Am 06.05.2015 um 00:51 schrieb Simon Albrecht <simon.albre...@mail.de>: > So sorry. I should’ve tested the code before posting… > You need to use \line { } instead of a simple string in "". See attachment. > > > Am 06.05.2015 um 00:41 schrieb Tobias Braun: >> I got it to work in \lyricmode now, but it still won't work in the \markup >> section. >> >> If I do it like you say below, I just get the code printed in the lyrics. If >> I end the string before \override and start a new one after "köñiglichen", >> it works, but then I get line breaks around "königlichen". Adding \markup >> doesn't improve things either. >> >> What exactly do "\override #'(word-space . 0)" and "\tied-lyric" do? When >> using "\override #'(word-space . 0)" inside a \lyricmode expression, "~" >> won't create a lyric tie (with a blank) anymore, but just literally print >> "~". I have to explicitly use \tied-lyric then. > They are markup commands. \override (the markup command) takes two arguments: > a pair and a markup. The pair consists of property and value, given in Scheme > syntax: #'(word-space . 0). The markup is produced using \tied-lyric, which > takes a string (a series of characters enclosed in "") as its argument, again > prefixed with # to make it a Scheme expression. And in order to use them in > \lyricmode, you have to enclose them in \markup explicitly. > > I hope that makes it a little clearer. Ein weites Feld… > Good night, :-) > Simon > <koeniglichen.ly> _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user