To add to what David Bailey wrote about Dorico:
You can set your own keyboard shortcuts to be just about anything, and you can
easily change the ones they provide. I changed the durations shortcuts to match
Finale’s (so I don’t have to relearn from nearly 30 years of Finale practice).
I moved
On 12/2/2016 1:52 PM, Michael Lawlor wrote:
> For those of you who have tried Dorico, does it treat the bar as the
> basic metrical unit (as in Finale and Sibelius) so bar lines have to
> align, even if they may use different time signatures? Trying to get a
> constant beat with different time
On 12/2/2016 1:52 PM, Michael Lawlor wrote:
> For those of you who have tried Dorico, does it treat the bar as the
> basic metrical unit (as in Finale and Sibelius) so bar lines have to
> align, even if they may use different time signatures? Trying to get a
> constant beat with different time
For those of you who have tried Dorico, does it treat the bar as the
basic metrical unit (as in Finale and Sibelius) so bar lines have to
align, even if they may use different time signatures? Trying to get a
constant beat with different time signatures, so the bar-lines of the
parts do not
On 12/1/2016 8:40 PM, Steve Parker wrote:
> I’ve spent a few hours playing with the Dorico trial.
> The workflow seems terrible..
> Can anyone answer some basic things? (I’ve rtfm…)
> How can I add bars?
> Can I use the arrow keys to input notes rather than a, b, c etc?
> I was really hoping that
I’ve spent a few hours playing with the Dorico trial.
The workflow seems terrible..
Can anyone answer some basic things? (I’ve rtfm…)
How can I add bars?
Can I use the arrow keys to input notes rather than a, b, c etc?
I was really hoping that Dorico would be open and modeless, in the sense that