Multiple midi outputs

2013-09-12 Thread Hilary Snaden
Is there a way of generating different midi outputs from a single Lilypond script, similar to using \book with \bookOutputName? -- Hilary ___ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user

Re: Question about autocompile bash script

2013-09-12 Thread Jim Long
On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 09:05:49AM -0400, Carl Peterson wrote: These are along the lines of what I was thinking of. I don't have any experience with C. My programming experience as of late is in PHP. So I gave some thought last night to using it to read the files and trace the \include

print from mac frescobaldi

2013-09-12 Thread Stanton Sanderson
It would be helpful if I could print directly from Frescobaldi (set up using Davide Liessi's instructions). While the standard print dialog appears, when print is pressed the message, cannot connect to the printer appears. Helpful suggestions appreciated! Thanks, Stan

Re: Skip to Specific Bar

2013-09-12 Thread Stefan Thomas
Dear Keiren, I think I understand much better what pushToTag does. What I would like to know: Who can I get Bar-Rests instead of spacer-rests for the length of intro verse and bridge? 2013/9/10 Kieren MacMillan kieren_macmil...@sympatico.ca Hi David, Thanks! That does the trick. Below is

Re: Multiple midi outputs

2013-09-12 Thread Marek Klein
Hello, 2013/9/12 Hilary Snaden h...@newearth.demon.co.uk Is there a way of generating different midi outputs from a single Lilypond script, similar to using \book with \bookOutputName? You can have different score block for layout and midi. For every score with midi you will get different

Re: Skip to Specific Bar

2013-09-12 Thread Kieren MacMillan
Hi Stefan, What I would like to know: Who can I get Bar-Rests instead of spacer-rests for the length of intro verse and bridge? This sounds like a job for a music function (applied on the global variable)! =) Hope this helps! Kieren. ___

Re: [ANNOUNCE] New Portfile for Frescobaldi on Mac

2013-09-12 Thread Wilbert Berendsen
Op Wed, 11 Sep 2013 17:16:21 +0200 Jacques Menu jacques.m...@epfl.ch schreef: Thanks for everything, both frescobaldi and frescobaldi-devel work fine now! Thanks to all people involved to make Frescobaldi on Mac OS X working! Best! Wilbert -- Wilbert Berendsen

Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Frederick Bartlett
All, I just installed LilyPond on a new laptop (same OS -- Windows 7 -- as before), but this time the registry entry HKCR\Python\shell\open\command\(Default), which is set to C:\Program Files\LilyPond\usr\bin\python.exe , interferes with my path to my Python installation in C:\Python27.

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Phil Holmes
Which LilyPond version? -- Phil Holmes - Original Message - From: Frederick Bartlett To: lilypond-user@gnu.org Sent: Thursday, September 12, 2013 2:32 PM Subject: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond All, I just installed LilyPond on a new laptop (same OS --

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Frederick Bartlett
Oh, sorry! 2.16.2 I have since found that I can run python scripts from the command line by typing, say, python myscript.py While just typing myscript produces an error, even though the Windows file association has been set to c:\Python27\python.exe. This seems, if anything, weirder than my

Re: [ANNOUNCE] New Portfile for Frescobaldi on Mac

2013-09-12 Thread Stan Sanderson
Thanks goes also to Wilbert Berendsen for creating Frescobaldi. As a Frescobaldi learning exercise, I encoded two pieces by J. F. Froberger - Ricereare I and Capriccio XV - a total of 20,018 keystrokes. Frescobaldi cut the time required at least by half, and I'm sure there are many shortcuts

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Phil Holmes
I believe it allows you to type progname.py at the command line, and have LilyPond's python run the script. -- Phil Holmes - Original Message - From: Frederick Bartlett To: Phil Holmes Cc: lilypond-user@gnu.org Sent: Thursday, September 12, 2013 3:16 PM Subject: Re:

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Phil Holmes
Because if that registry entry is not added and the user has no other python, then they would not be able to run LilyPond's python scripts. -- Phil Holmes - Original Message - From: Frederick Bartlett To: Phil Holmes Cc: lilypond-user@gnu.org Sent: Thursday, September 12,

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Frederick Bartlett
Well, yes ... but why would I want LilyPond's python to run a script instead of the system's python? Perhaps I'm just not advanced enough a LilyPond user Fred On 12 September 2013 10:22, Phil Holmes m...@philholmes.net wrote: ** I believe it allows you to type progname.py at the

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
Carl Peterson carlopeter...@gmail.com writes: On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 1:20 PM, David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: Tim Roberts t...@probo.com writes: David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: How does it make it harder? As I said, replying to a digest makes no sense with regard to message

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Kieren MacMillan
Hi all, I have no idea how your email system would figure out just what mail Tim had been replying to. The information is just not there in the headers. Apple Mail uses the Subject (as text), and I imagine there are other applications that do the same. This of course leads to any number of

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Carl Peterson
On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 1:46 PM, Kieren MacMillan kieren_macmil...@sympatico.ca wrote: Hi all, I have no idea how your email system would figure out just what mail Tim had been replying to. The information is just not there in the headers. Apple Mail uses the Subject (as text), and I

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Tim Roberts
David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: How does it make it harder? As I said, replying to a digest makes no sense with regard to message threading anyway. Of course it makes sense. I just did it, and your mailer is almost certainly showing you the proper threading, isn't it? -- Tim Roberts,

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Carl Peterson
On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 1:20 PM, David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: Tim Roberts t...@probo.com writes: David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: How does it make it harder? As I said, replying to a digest makes no sense with regard to message threading anyway. Of course it makes sense. I

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
Tim Roberts t...@probo.com writes: David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: How does it make it harder? As I said, replying to a digest makes no sense with regard to message threading anyway. Of course it makes sense. I just did it, and your mailer is almost certainly showing you the proper

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
Kieren MacMillan kieren_macmil...@sympatico.ca writes: Hi all, I have no idea how your email system would figure out just what mail Tim had been replying to. The information is just not there in the headers. Apple Mail uses the Subject (as text), and I imagine there are other applications

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Carl Peterson
On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 2:04 PM, David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: I'm certain Gmail will also be able to figure out the mail you are replying to without referring to any header at all as long as any Gmail user has not yet deleted it (and probably even afterwards). But for a normal mail

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
Carl Peterson carlopeter...@gmail.com writes: On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 1:46 PM, Kieren MacMillan kieren_macmil...@sympatico.ca wrote: I have no idea how your email system would figure out just what mail Tim had been replying to. The information is just not there in the headers. Apple

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Tim Roberts
Frederick Bartlett frederick.bartl...@gmail.com wrote: Oh, sorry! 2.16.2 I have since found that I can run python scripts from the command line by typing, say, python myscript.py While just typing myscript produces an error, even though the Windows file association has been set to

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Carl Peterson
On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 2:48 PM, David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: Not sure about that. The information usually is available in the headers, and as far as I can tell, Gmail does preserve and maintain it as well. So unless someone breaks the chain, it would seem like a poor choice not to

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
Carl Peterson carlopeter...@gmail.com writes: This is a question of whether it makes sense from the human side or the computer side. From the computer side, certainly. However, adding a reply-to target doesn't fix that. If someone's going to reply from the digest, they're going to reply from

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
Carl Peterson carlopeter...@gmail.com writes: On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 2:04 PM, David Kastrup d...@gnu.org wrote: I'm certain Gmail will also be able to figure out the mail you are replying to without referring to any header at all as long as any Gmail user has not yet deleted it (and

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Brian Barker
At 14:50 12/09/2013 -0500, Evan Driscoll wrote: Now, that being said and because I'm sure no one cares, IMO the way the Lilypond list is set up (reply goes to the sender) is *absolutely* the correct way to run a mailing list, and the alternative is completely maddening. It's not just your

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Rogers
David Kastrup d...@gnu.org writes: As I said, replies from a digest rarely make sense because of breaking the message threading. This is true, or at least I'm willing to take it as true - but if a digest exists, then it would be very strange and frustrating to try to disallow replying to it.

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Evan Driscoll
The main reason I'm responding to this is to point out that if you use digests, it's possible to configure it so that it sends each message as an attachment instead of just dumping them all into the message body. If you see something you want to respond to, you can just open up the corresponding

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
Evan Driscoll edrisc...@wisc.edu writes: I definitely pay attention to who I keep on the CC list and will remove people if I have reason to believe the followup is a lot less relevant for them, but that's my general rule of thumb. Maybe it's just because I don't get enough emails, but I get

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Carl Peterson
On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 3:50 PM, Evan Driscoll edrisc...@wisc.edu wrote: On 9/12/2013 2:03 PM, Carl Peterson wrote: It also discourages the delightful idiots who insist on replying all to a mass mailing (when the original sender didn't have the decency or know-how to stick the recipient

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
David Rogers davidandrewrog...@gmail.com writes: David Kastrup d...@gnu.org writes: As I said, replies from a digest rarely make sense because of breaking the message threading. This is true, or at least I'm willing to take it as true - but if a digest exists, then it would be very strange

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread Phil Holmes
- Original Message - From: David Rogers davidandrewrog...@gmail.com To: David Kastrup d...@gnu.org Cc: lilypond-user@gnu.org Sent: Thursday, September 12, 2013 9:02 PM Subject: Re: mea máxima culpa David Kastrup d...@gnu.org writes: As I said, replies from a digest rarely make sense

PDF portfolio of 2.17.26 docs

2013-09-12 Thread Nick Payne
A PDF portfolio of the Extending, Internals, Learning, Notation, Snippets, Usage, and Web manuals is available at https://www.dropbox.com/s/s1oqbioxvu8630y/lilydoc-2.17.26.pdf (53MB) ___ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread David Kastrup
Hilary Snaden h...@newearth.demon.co.uk writes: Nearly two years ago I wrote to this list commenting about major problems (including registry residue) resulting from trying to run Python 2, Python 3 and Lilypond on the same Windoze box. Since switching to GNU/Linux they've all got on just

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Hilary Snaden
On 2013-09-12 14:32, Frederick Bartlett wrote: All, I just installed LilyPond on a new laptop (same OS -- Windows 7 -- as before), but this time the registry entry HKCR\Python\shell\open\command\(Default), which is set to C:\Program Files\LilyPond\usr\bin\python.exe , interferes with my

Re: Multiple midi outputs

2013-09-12 Thread Ian Hulin
On 12/09/13 07:25, Hilary Snaden wrote: Is there a way of generating different midi outputs from a single Lilypond script, similar to using \book with \bookOutputName? Issue 1354 Cheers Ian ___ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Eluze
Hilary Snaden wrote On 2013-09-12 14:32, Frederick Bartlett wrote: There seem to have been problems regarding the registry in the past, but not exactly like the one I've encountered ... does anyone have handy info on how to convince Windows to let LilyPond run its own python while

Re: mea máxima culpa

2013-09-12 Thread James Harkins
David Kastrup dak at gnu.org writes: Well yes, a thread is logically a _tree_. A chronological sort only renders a list, and that's just not useful for tracking a particular conversation to its start. FWIW, I receive the digest and when I want to reply to a message, I use gmane. It's

film score example

2013-09-12 Thread Curt
Hi all - About a year ago, several of you answered questions of mine about notating a film score. I reached a stopping point with the first cue and learned a bit more about git, so I have the first film cue from the score up on github now: https://github.com/tunesmith/TheForgivingSea (pdf

Re: Windows registry, Python, and LilyPond

2013-09-12 Thread Helge Kruse
Well, Microsoft has invented the side-by-side (SxS) installation years ago. I has been introduced for Windows XP. (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa376307.aspx) Although the name assembly suggests that it has to do with .NET CLR it is a plain DLL thing suitable for native C applications.