Hi wjm and list, On 17/05/13 02:26, wjm wrote: > Greetings! > After watching Sarah K Alawami's work on a score recently on this > user-list, but not having the musical and compositional skills to make > constructive remarks, and after reading the thread entitled 'stylesheet > structure', it occurred to me that an approach might be found which > might make the whole process a little less opaque. >
<snip> > Here is a pointer to some of the templates referenced in the Learning Manual as Appendix A5: (development version documentation) http://www.lilypond.org/doc/v2.17/Documentation/learning/orchestral-templates (stable version documentation) http://www.lilypond.org/doc/v2.16/Documentation/learning/orchestral-templates If you want to invest a bit more time, there are a couple of packages which allow you to set up large score if you invest a bit of time in the learning curve, both of which I have used. One is Reinhold Kainhofer's orchestrallily, which is at http://reinhold.kainhofer.com/orchestrallily/index.html#The-Orchestrallily-Package There is a pointer to download the file at that address. Once downloaded, you may need to run it through convert-ly if running a version of LilyPond after V2.14. Reinhold has had to bow out of actively participating in the LilyPond lists, but I'm sure he'd be OK answering any queries from people using the package. The other possibility is Mark Witmer's ly-score package at github - see www.github/mwitmer/LyUtil#readme. Hope this is useful. Cheers, Ian Hulin _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
