2018-05-26 9:38 GMT+02:00 Helge Kruse :
> Am 25.05.2018 um 13:13 schrieb Thomas Morley:
>> Hi,
>>
>> you'll need a spanner from note to note, Glissando is your best bet, I'd say.
>> I once made the attached code.
>
> Wow! That solves the problem. This fancy glissando can be
Am 25.05.2018 um 13:13 schrieb Thomas Morley:
> Hi,
>
> you'll need a spanner from note to note, Glissando is your best bet, I'd say.
> I once made the attached code.
Wow! That solves the problem. This fancy glissando can be fine tuned for
each instrument, so that it produces nearly the picture
Am 25.05.2018 um 13:44 schrieb Aaron Hill:
> On 2018-05-24 23:15, Helge Kruse wrote:
>> But these lines are outside the staff. If you change "(rlineto 10 1)" to
>> "(rlineto 10 10)" then the starting point is moved down to keep the
>> markup outside the stuff. Further it doesn't support the
On 2018-05-24 23:15, Helge Kruse wrote:
But these lines are outside the staff. If you change "(rlineto 10 1)"
to
"(rlineto 10 10)" then the starting point is moved down to keep the
markup outside the stuff. Further it doesn't support the x-position of
the next/previous note column.
There is a
On 2018-05-24 23:15, Helge Kruse wrote:
How can I draw lines from note head to next note head with \path or
\postscript inside the staff? This should be robust to changes in the
other staves, e.g. if the other staff changes to 32th notes.
Hi Helge,
If you just need to draw lines between
2018-05-25 8:15 GMT+02:00 Helge Kruse :
> The appendix A.10.3 of the Lilypond notation manual describes several
> possibilities to use \path or \postscript in a \markup context. So you
> can use this to draw some lines:
>
> \version "2.18.2"
>
> <<
> \relative c' {
>
The appendix A.10.3 of the Lilypond notation manual describes several
possibilities to use \path or \postscript in a \markup context. So you
can use this to draw some lines:
\version "2.18.2"
<<
\relative c' {
e4^\markup { \path #0.25 #'((rmoveto 0 0)