Re: handbell shake

2018-05-30 Thread Rick Kimpel
From: Thomas Morley Sent: Wednesday, May 30, 2018 10:40 PM > Hi Rick, > > I don't know anything about handbell choir music and which special > notation-features may be needed. There are a ton of things I need to do for this library, but this seemed like a good middle-of-the-road starting point.

Re: handbell shake

2018-05-30 Thread Aaron Hill
On 2018-05-30 15:40, Thomas Morley wrote: I don't know anything about handbell choir music and which special notation-features may be needed. Are there any images you could link to? Thomas, For your (or anyone else's) reference, here is a site that summarizes standard American handbell

Re: handbell shake

2018-05-30 Thread Thomas Morley
2018-05-30 0:32 GMT+02:00 Rick Kimpel : > I am trying to build a library of functions for handbell choir music. The > first thing I attempted was how to show a shake. It sort of looks like a > trill mark, but the squiggly line is at the level of the note being played. > I'm hoping that I can just

Re: Barline glyphs in lilyglyphs

2018-05-30 Thread Urs Liska
Am 30.05.2018 um 20:46 schrieb Sam Bivens: Hi Urs, A barline is not a glyph but is *drawn* in LilyPond. Therefore it doesn't"t belong to the glyphs accessible by lilyglyphs. Thanks; this is what I feared! Don't think that's a serious issue. Please describe more concretely what you

Re: Barline glyphs in lilyglyphs

2018-05-30 Thread Erik Ronström
If you’re not specifically requiring the Feta font, you could try Bravura Text (https://www.smufl.org/fonts/) See https://w3c.github.io/smufl/gitbook/tables/barlines.html https://w3c.github.io/smufl/gitbook/tables/repeats.html Regards Erik > 30 maj 2018 kl. 20:35 skrev Sam Bivens : > > Hi

Re: Barline glyphs in lilyglyphs

2018-05-30 Thread Sam Bivens
Hi Urs, A barline is not a glyph but is *drawn* in LilyPond. Therefore it doesn't"t belong to the glyphs accessible by lilyglyphs. Thanks; this is what I feared! Please describe more concretely what you want (with/without staff lines etc.). It is possible to add commands with precompiled

Re: Barline glyphs in lilyglyphs

2018-05-30 Thread Urs Liska
Am 30. Mai 2018 20:35:44 MESZ schrieb Sam Bivens : >Hi all, > >How can I invoke a barline glyph in lilyglyphs? I'm having trouble >finding a list of glyphs akin to >http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.18/Documentation/notation/the-feta-font > A barline is not a glyph but is *drawn* in LilyPond.

Barline glyphs in lilyglyphs

2018-05-30 Thread Sam Bivens
Hi all, How can I invoke a barline glyph in lilyglyphs? I'm having trouble finding a list of glyphs akin to http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.18/Documentation/notation/the-feta-font Thanks, Sam ___ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org

Re: transpose several key signature

2018-05-30 Thread Torsten Hämmerle
David Kastrup wrote > Excuse me? Ah, yes, sorry, of course… I just looked at Ming's example, had (for an unknown reason) something *\naturalizeMusic* in mind and completely ignored what I had said before about intervals. When transposing F major down a minor second, we will get E major quite

Re: transpose several key signature

2018-05-30 Thread David Kastrup
Torsten Hämmerle writes: > Apart from that, LilyPond will use suitable enharmonic key signatures if > things (i.e. accidentals) are getting too weird. > In your example, the second key signature (F major) will *not* be converted > into Fb major (with 6 flats and even one double-flat!) but into E

Re: transpose several key signature

2018-05-30 Thread Torsten Hämmerle
Hi Ming, I think there is a general misunderstanding: When saying "\transpose ef d", ef and d do *not* mean key signatures but reference pitches defining an interval, nothing more, nothing less. For specifying a key signature, by the way, you'd also have to state the mode (e.g. minor, major,