Hello,
Another alternative is lyluatex, that you may find here :
https://github.com/jperon/lyluatex.
For this to work, you'll have to use lualatex.
Jacques Peron +
Le 16 févr. 2017 14:32, "Urs Liska" a écrit :
Am 16. Februar 2017 07:02:10 MEZ schrieb Don Gingrich <
bility for those who already used lyluatex.
Please feel free to test and report bugs
<https://github.com/jperon/lyluatex/issues> !
2017-11-19 20:54 GMT+01:00 Abbé Jacques Peron <abbe.jacques.pe...@gmail.com>
:
> Just tried that, and it doesn’t work :
>
> \let\lilypond@envcod
to be sure…
2017-11-19 20:39 GMT+01:00 Abbé Jacques Peron <abbe.jacques.pe...@gmail.com>
:
> Neither are called lilypond. It's not particularly great, but there are
>>> examples for the sharing of command and environment. Basically you
>>> check whether @currenvir is set t
And @David Kastrup : thank you very much for telling me how to achieve the
same name for environment and command !
2017-11-19 22:05 GMT+01:00 Abbé Jacques Peron <abbe.jacques.pe...@gmail.com>
:
> I found the problem : it came from @currenv, that is in fact @currenvir.
> After last m
>
> Neither are called lilypond. It's not particularly great, but there are
>> examples for the sharing of command and environment. Basically you
>> check whether @currenvir is set to LilyPond. As long as you don't
>> _nest_ those constructs...
>>
>> The environment is defined as `ly`, but
Hello,
Le 11 mars 2018 00:24:48 GMT+01:00, Craig Dabelstein
a écrit :
>Hi Urs,
>
>I can't get it to find my
>installation of Lilypond. Could you give me an example of the code I
>need
>to point lyluatex to a Lilypond installation?
You should use the option