Hi Werner,
I have made a quick search for \skipBar and have not been able to
find it. Where did you find it? Looking at your \score block I am not
sure why you are using it where you are. What exactly is it supposed
to skip? As I understand it, Score.skipTypesetting is used to skip
typsetting a block of music so that you can check a portion of a
piece quickly. ie. you don't have to wait for a large score to
compile everything every time. The property is set within the notes
and gets set to ##t at the beginning of the block that you want to
skip, and then set to ##f at the end of the block (at the point that
you want Lilypond to begin rendering).
Hope this helps, and hope that I have not totally missed the point.
Walter Hofmeister
On Feb 11, 2008, at 1:37 PM, Werner wrote:
Hello,
I've written a file containing a score with a structure like:
\score {
\new Staff = bla <<
\new voice =blu {\voiceOne \Sopran}
\new voice =blu {\voiceTwo \Alt} >>
}
Wanted to put the
\set Score.skipBars = ##t
command in.
This:
\score {
\new Staff = bla <<
\new voice =blu {\voiceOne \Sopran}
\new voice =blu {\voiceTwo \Alt} >>
\set Score.skipBars = ##t
}
brings syntax error unexpected \set
This
\score {
\new Staff = bla <<
\new voice =blu {\voiceOne \Sopran}
\new voice =blu {\voiceTwo \Alt}
\set Score.skipBars = ##t >>
}
works.
For me this is very strange.
Also the documentation gives no hint about...
Could somebody explain that?
WM
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