It would seem more useful. To have such punctuation against the word
for the reason that for example with an exclamation point it alters
the expression of the word. if you have to arrive at the end of the
extender lines to find out about such a change it impedes a quick and
accurate reading of the score.

Shane

On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 3:21 PM, David Kastrup <[email protected]> wrote:
> Marc Hohl <[email protected]> writes:
>
>> Am 23.01.2012 20:36, schrieb Nils:
>>> [...]
>>>
>>>
>>> Any known solutions? And if not: I find it strange to make it like
>>> this. Do you know reasons that speaks against __ _ _! which I can
>>> tell my publisher?
>> Well, at least in "Behind bars" from Elaine Gould it is explained that the
>> punctuations come *before* the extender line. This book is said to be
>> the ultimate guide to writing scores - does that count?
>
> I'd be interested in the rationale.  So what is the explanation?
>
> --
> David Kastrup
>
>
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