Re: Transposing chord names

2003-10-03 Thread Laurie Savage
Thanks to all who helped. I had made a syntax error. :( Laurie ___ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user

Re: Transposing chord names

2003-09-27 Thread Laurie Savage
Thanks, I reread some of the sample files and realised I had placed the \transpose x y in the wrong place. Rewiting the \score sectio to read \score { \notes \transpose bes c { <\melody ... \harmony ...>}} fixed things. Thanks for the help Laurie On Sat, 27 Sep 2003, Patrick Atamaniuk wrote:

Re: Transposing chord names

2003-09-27 Thread Patrick Atamaniuk
Hello, Not a solution for the primary problem, but perhaps a reason for the D6/x effect: assuming you're not in \relative mode, try <> so that d is not the base tone. Otherwise lilypond reads <>. But this should read D6/sus4/sus2 without 8 #8 or 10. ??? /p Laurie Savage([EMAIL PROTECTED

Transposing chord names

2003-09-27 Thread Han-Wen Nienhuys
.ly example please. [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > I am unable to transpose chord names correctly. > > If I enter chords as e1:m7 f1:maj7 etc then they print correctly on the > score but do not transpose with the rest of the score. My notes and key > signature do transpose correctly. > > If I e

Transposing chord names

2003-09-26 Thread Laurie Savage
I am unable to transpose chord names correctly. If I enter chords as e1:m7 f1:maj7 etc then they print correctly on the score but do not transpose with the rest of the score. My notes and key signature do transpose correctly. If I enter e-minor7 chord as <> then it transposes but displays as D