On 03.03.2018 02:06, Andrew Bernard wrote:
> Try this:
>
> \override Clef.font-size = #-3
>
> Adjust size to taste.
>
> Well worth spending the time to read and digest the material in the
> Internals section of the documentation. Look up Clef in the 'All
> layout objects' section, and then look at
Try this:
\override Clef.font-size = #-3
Adjust size to taste.
Well worth spending the time to read and digest the material in the
Internals section of the documentation. Look up Clef in the 'All layout
objects' section, and then look at the bottom to see all the interfaces
Clef implements, and
[The email David’s responding to was rejected for the mailing list since
the attachments were too large; you can find the images at
https://imgur.com/a/jc6ga.]
On 03.03.2018 01:11, David Kastrup wrote:
> Lucas Werkmeister writes:
>
>> Hi!
>>
>> Andrew, attached you’ll find a photograph of the sco
Lucas Werkmeister writes:
> Hi!
>
> Andrew, attached you’ll find a photograph of the score I’m trying to
> reproduce (please excuse the quality) and a screenshot of what Lilypond
> produces.
>
> David, apologies – I’m not very familiar with the difference between cue
> and regular clefs, but at l
Lucas Werkmeister writes:
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to transcribe a piano composition from the late 19th
> century, staying as faithful to the original score as possible. At two
> points in this score, the right hand is set in bass clef for two bars,
> and one of those sections is across a line br
Hi Lukas,
Can you post an image of what you want? That would make it easier to help.
Andrew
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Hello,
I am trying to transcribe a piano composition from the late 19th
century, staying as faithful to the original score as possible. At two
points in this score, the right hand is set in bass clef for two bars,
and one of those sections is across a line break, similar to this tiny
example:
\ve