> On 20 Mar 2017, at 00:31, David Kastrup <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hans Γ berg <[email protected]> writes: > >>> On 19 Mar 2017, at 23:54, Trevor Daniels <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> David Kastrup wrote Sunday, March 19, 2017 10:11 PM >>> >>>> Here is my version using >>>> >>>> \new TabStaff \with { stringTunings = \lute-tuning >>>> tablatureFormat = #fret-letter-tablature-format >>>> fretLabels = \markuplist \bold \fontsize #3 \lower #0.2 >>>> { π π π π‘ π’ π£ π€ π₯ π¦ π¨ π© πͺ π« π¬ π } >>>> } \content >>>> >>>> (\bold does not seem to work, however): >>> >>> Much nicer. >> >> The mathematical bold fraktur are separate Unicode code points, so >> probably must have a separate list. > > Ok, so > > \new TabStaff \with { stringTunings = \lute-tuning > tablatureFormat = #fret-letter-tablature-format > fretLabels = \markuplist \fontsize #2 \lower #0.2 > { π π π π π π π π π π π π π π π } > } \content > > But c and e _do_ look too similar. Well, it was a nice idea.
Probably better to use a special font, with letter in the ordinary code points. WP has an article about the style: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraktur Also SMuFL has some Renaissance tablature stuff: http://www.smufl.org/version/latest/range/renaissanceLuteTablature/ _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
