Dear Mark
Thank you for pointing me yet again to that page. This is the third time
I read it, and only now I noticed this sentence:
"When a shift is applied, voices with upstems (odd-numbered voices)
are shifted to the right, and voices with downstems (even-numbered
voices) are shifted to the left."
So, it doesn't matter what voices I choose (even if the text says
"even-numbered voices"), if I choose for force the stem down, then it
will be shifted left.
So, to get what I want I might need some kind of absolute positioning.
But I will keep it that way. Was just trying to understand how changing
stems changed note positioning.
Best,
ambs
On 19/07/14, 21:02, Mark Stephen Mrotek wrote:
Alberto:
My understanding of how the \voice commence of the { \\ } construct
influences the position of notes comes from
http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.16/Documentation/notation/multiple-voices.
Some of the examples show notes in "middle" voices automatically "shifted."
Perhaps these would answer some of your questions.
Mark
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Alberto Simões
Sent: Saturday, July 19, 2014 11:18 AM
To: Kieren MacMillan
Cc: Lilypond-User Mailing List
Subject: Re: shiftOn shifts to the left
On 19/07/14, 19:15, Kieren MacMillan wrote:
Hi Alberto,
I am saying that \voiceThree vs \voiceThree \stemDown is enough to change
the note position.
So am I: \voiceThree changes the note position, stem direction, and a
number of other things.
Sure, but \voiceThree is in both examples.
The only difference is the \stemDown command.
Sorry, but I am not following where \voiceX documentation explains how
\stemDown changes a note position :(
Best,
abs
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