The default position is centered which makes this useless especially if
a long marking occurs at the beginning of the piece. right-align or
left-align don't seem to help. There is probably a solution if one
reaches deeper into the definition of \mark but do you have an easier
one? Again if
On 27-Mar-05, at 5:37 AM, Luke Palmer wrote:
I'm transcribing a 15 part orchestral piece, and we've come to the
point
of putting in tempo markings. After doing it the obvious way for a few
parts (r1^\allegroMaNonTroppo), I decided it might be better to create
a
mock staff
Graham Percival wrote:
On 27-Mar-05, at 5:37 AM, Luke Palmer wrote:
I'm transcribing a 15 part orchestral piece, and we've come to the point
of putting in tempo markings. After doing it the obvious way for a few
parts (r1^\allegroMaNonTroppo), I decided it might be better to create a
mock staff
Paul Scott wrote:
Graham Percival wrote:
On 27-Mar-05, at 5:37 AM, Luke Palmer wrote:
I'm transcribing a 15 part orchestral piece, and we've come to the
point
of putting in tempo markings. After doing it the obvious way for a
few
parts (r1^\allegroMaNonTroppo), I decided it might be
On 27-Mar-05, at 5:37 AM, Luke Palmer wrote:
I'm transcribing a 15 part orchestral piece, and we've come to the
point
of putting in tempo markings. After doing it the obvious way for a few
parts (r1^\allegroMaNonTroppo), I decided it might be better to create
a
mock staff everywhere we want the
Graham Percival writes:
On 27-Mar-05, at 5:37 AM, Luke Palmer wrote:
I'm transcribing a 15 part orchestral piece, and we've come to the
point
of putting in tempo markings. After doing it the obvious way for a few
parts (r1^\allegroMaNonTroppo), I decided it might be better to create
a