Alexander Kobel wrote:
I think Klaus did not ask for forcing the hyphen to be visible,
or forcing it to be hidden, but instead choose the letters
depending on whether the hyphen appears or not in that place
(with automatic deduction how cramped the space is).
Correct. Nevertheless if a forced
Olivier Biot wrote:
If no hyphen is needed, then write lecker. Otherwise write lek-ker.
A manually written hyphen as in lek-ker looks different to lek -- ker,
and then there is the alignment difference when writing lecker _
On a side note, I didn't know this German hyphenation variant.
This
Klaus Föhl klaus.fo...@uni-giessen.de writes:
Olivier Biot wrote:
If no hyphen is needed, then write lecker. Otherwise write lek-ker.
A manually written hyphen as in lek-ker looks different to lek -- ker,
and then there is the alignment difference when writing lecker _
On a side note, I
On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 1:08 AM, Alexander Kobel n...@a-kobel.de wrote:
On a different side note, it'd also be really nice if one could specify that
no additional space should be introduced if there is no hyphen. At least
that's how hand-engraved scores seem to do if horizontal space is at a
2013/3/8 Klaus Föhl klaus.fo...@uni-giessen.de:
Hello,
Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung
feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is lecker, with hyphen
it is lek-ker. Using lec -- ker or lek -- ker ( on purpose not le -- cker)
the hyphen
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 6:09 PM, Alexander Kobel n...@a-kobel.de wrote:
On 03/08/2013 10:19 AM, Mats Bengtsson wrote:
On 03/08/2013 03:52 PM, lilypond-user-requ...@gnu.org wrote:
Hello,
Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung
feature ck between two
On 03/09/2013 06:37 PM, Olivier Biot wrote:
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 6:09 PM, Alexander Kobel n...@a-kobel.de
mailto:n...@a-kobel.de wrote:
On 03/08/2013 10:19 AM, Mats Bengtsson wrote:
On 03/08/2013 03:52 PM, lilypond-user-requ...@gnu.org
Hello,
Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung
feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is lecker, with hyphen
it is lek-ker. Using lec -- ker or lek -- ker ( on purpose not le -- cker)
the hyphen may or may not appear. Is there anything beyond trial
Hi,
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 2:41 PM, Klaus Föhl klaus.fo...@uni-giessen.de wrote:
Hello,
Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung
feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is lecker, with hyphen
it is lek-ker. Using lec -- ker or lek -- ker ( on
On 03/08/2013 03:52 PM, lilypond-user-requ...@gnu.org wrote:
Hello,
Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung
feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is lecker, with hyphen
it is lek-ker. Using lec -- ker or lek -- ker ( on purpose not le -- cker)
On 03/08/2013 10:19 AM, Mats Bengtsson wrote:
On 03/08/2013 03:52 PM, lilypond-user-requ...@gnu.org wrote:
Hello,
Some German lyrics from before the times of Neue Deutsche Rechtschreibung
feature ck between two syllables. Without Hyphen it is lecker, with
hyphen
it is lek-ker. Using lec --
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