John Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
For example, if I download a .ly file from somewhere,
has any effort been made to prevent that file from
doing something bad to my system?
No. You'll have to read the .ly. The --safe mode was dropped quite
some time ago.
I doubt TeX can do anything
If you read the section about Text Scripts in the (on-line)
reference manual, you will find a link at the bottom of the
page to TextScript, which gives a list of all properties
that can be set on this graphical object (grob, for short).
Among others, there is a property called font-family that
you
The linewidth option should do it. Try something like:
\lilypond[notime,26pt,linewidth=2.5in]
{ \clef alto c'4 }
A good alternative is
\lilypond[notime,26pt,fragment]
{ \clef alto c'4 }
I don't know anything about the labels style, but it seems that
you will have to fiddle with some
Greetings Mats,
Thanks for the help. Unfortunately, I had tried both suggestions before
writing to you. With the linewidth parameter, the staff itself is 2.5 inches
wide, which is not the intention. The fragment tag also seems to do no good.
From what I can tell, lilypond is taking the
Quoting Mats Bengtsson [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Among others, there is a property called font-family that
you can set to sans to get sans serif fonts.
If you want to set this property for the full score, do
... SNIP ...
i knew the font-family property, but did not know how to use the trick with
Rejoice with me, most kind and unseen friends!
I've gotten the flashcards to work. This is a good thing.
The second line of the file is:
\newcommand{\lilypondbook}{}
Each flashcard is written as:
\begin{tabular}{c}
\lilypond[notime,26pt,raggedright,fragment]
After some experimentation, I found that the flute MIDI voice is there,
it's just insanely soft. Even at forte, it's near inaudible with my
speakers turned up to max.
Any way to turn up the general volume of this voice without using
\f?
Thanks.
---
My original message:
I'm
Here's something I've never figured out. When using lilypond-book with
LaTeX (and the graphics package) the textwidth has never behaved as I
would have thought. For example:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{graphics}
\usepackage{geometry}
\geometry{textwidth=190mm,