What I talked about were the default rules that are used in Lilypond.
As soon as you specify \voiceOne / \voiceTwo (or specify them implicitly
using the <<{...} \\ {...} >> construct, then these default rules are
overridden
and instead all articulations are placed above (for \voiceOne) or below
(for \voiceTwo)
the stave.
/Mats
Arvid Grøtting wrote:
Mats Bengtsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
There's one particular aspect of controlling directions that's specific for
articulations, namely that each separate articulation has its own rule for
the default direction. Some articulations, like \fermata, are always
above the stave,
...except in two-staff four-voice polyphonic vocal music, where the
lower staff has its fermatas below the staff.
:-)
Example e.g. here:
http://forlag.studentersangforeningen.no/noter.html#_Nielsen_Aftenstemning
-- Arvid
(proving the rule, am I?)
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--
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Mats Bengtsson
Signal Processing
School of Electrical Engineering
Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)
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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