Yes, you can use Fronimo on a mac. You may want to poke through the
   archives to find out how to do it.
   I seem to remember that there was something like emulating a pc
   environment for Fronimo on your mac.
   I am by no means a computer expert or something, but members of the
   list talked about that issue several times.
   Mathias
   Gesendet mit der Telekom Mail App
   --- Original-Nachricht ---
   Von: Mac User
   Betreff: [LUTE] Lute Tablature using Finale
   Datum: 25.03.2020, 2:31 Uhr
   An: [email protected]
   @font-face { font-family: telegrotesk-medium_normal; src:
   url("file:///android_asset/fonts/telegrotesk_normal.ttf");}html,body {
   font-family: "telegrotesk-medium_normal"; font-size: medium; color:
   #4b4b4b; width: 100%;}
   Hi all! I've been using Finale as my primary music notation software
   for many years. Recently, I've begun arranging Renaissance and early
   Baroque music for a mixed lute trio (Tenor in G, Alto in A, Soprano in
   D), and while Finale does a fabulous job notating, transposing,
   printing, etc., the one complaint I've had (and have made it myself) is
   the look and function of the font used for the letters when notating in
   the French style. I've tried many fonts available on my computer; none
   seem adequate. Specifically, the letters cover each other when two or
   more notes appear at the same time. A friend recommended using Fronimo,
   but I don't believe that one works on a Mac, which I use exclusively.
   Does anyone here have a recommendation?
   Craig Wiggins
   Durham, NC
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