Hi Graham,
Use \tag. It was invented for *precisely* this situation. It should be somewhere in NR 3.
I avoid \tag at all costs — and suggest the same to other users, and warn newbies against it (or don't introduce them to it in the first place) — because it FORCES THE MIXTURE OF CONTENT AND PRESENTATION, which is A Bad Thing™.
If there's another (non-\tag) way to do the same thing, that's The Better Way™.
\tag is \evil (albeit *sometimes*, i.e. very rarely, necessary).
To everybody else who tried to help: read the bloody manual. Especially NR 3. There's lots of good stuff there.
Not if it recommends to use \tag in any case except "In Case Of Fire"… Cheers, Kieren. _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
