I tried the print-all-headers = ##t and it didn't work.
I also tried \bookpart around the \include and it gave me fatal errors.

I have looked at the documents you reference, but I will have to look at
the TitleMarkup I think.

Thank you for directing me.

On Thu, Oct 15, 2020 at 12:17 PM Xavier Scheuer <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Thu, 15 Oct 2020 at 18:00, Molly Preston <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> > Hello. I am confused by the hierarchy of headings. I have read about it
> in the manuals and still find it confusing.
> >
> > I am trying to use \include to compile my sonata. The score block and
> headings are in each file.
> >
> > I basically just have this:
> >
> > \include "Circle_mvt1.ly"
> > \pageBreak
> > \include "Circle_mvt2.ly"
> > \pageBreak
> > \include "Circle_mvt3.ly"
> >
> > The third movement's heading is what's being shown on the first page.
> That is why I ask about the hierarchy of headings. I tried putting the
> headings in this file instead of in each individual file.
>
> Hello,
>
> Difficult to answer if you do not show us what is present in your files...
> I guess it is each time a \score block and its corresponding \header block.
>
> Anyway, I guess what you are looking for is
> \paper {
>   print-all-headers = ##t
> }
>
> But instead of putting these manual \pageBreak it would be more
> interesting to use \bookpart.
> All this is documented in NR 3.2 Titles and headers and NR 3.1.5 File
> structure.
>
> Personally for works with several movements I have customized the headers 
> (scoreTitleMarkup,
> see NR 3.2.2) and use a custom "movement" field.
>
> Cheers,
> Xavier
>
> --
> Xavier Scheuer <[email protected]>
>
>

Reply via email to