As long as the music stays mostly within the same octave, you might
find it easier to use absolute mode and just transpose it to the right
octave. Example:

\score{
\transpose c c'{
  c4 c g g | a a g2 | f4 f e e | d d c2 |
  g4 c' f d' | e g, d2 |
}
}

   /Mats

Roman V. Isaev wrote:
I'm not a good musician. In other words, I never can tell when the next note is going to be octave up or down. On other hand it's
difficult to enter scores without relative mode, too much typing.
So how to cope with this? Is it possible to tune vim that it would
show where the last note is going to be placed relative to previous?
Or may be there is a simple rule to determine if the next note is going to jump? Currently I have to enter a few measures and compile
to fix several misplaced notes and it's very slow...


--
=============================================
        Mats Bengtsson
        Signal Processing
        Signals, Sensors and Systems
        Royal Institute of Technology
        SE-100 44  STOCKHOLM
        Sweden
        Phone: (+46) 8 790 8463                         
        Fax:   (+46) 8 790 7260
        Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        WWW: http://www.s3.kth.se/~mabe
=============================================


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