Am 05.09.2018 um 15:01 schrieb Urs Liska:
>
>
> Am 5. September 2018 14:27:06 MESZ schrieb Simon Albrecht
> :
>> On 15.08.2018 07:50, Jan-Peter Voigt wrote:
>>> yes you are right, \change Staff cannot be used with the EE. Some
>> time
>>> ago I tried to make it possible, but it results in a
Am 5. September 2018 14:27:06 MESZ schrieb Simon Albrecht
:
>On 15.08.2018 07:50, Jan-Peter Voigt wrote:
>> yes you are right, \change Staff cannot be used with the EE. Some
>time
>> ago I tried to make it possible, but it results in a fatal crash of
>> lilypond if the EE sends such an event.
On 15.08.2018 07:50, Jan-Peter Voigt wrote:
yes you are right, \change Staff cannot be used with the EE. Some time
ago I tried to make it possible, but it results in a fatal crash of
lilypond if the EE sends such an event. I add this to the issues.
Maybe with a minimal example this should also
hello Auke,
if you want to separate the staff changes from the note input, you could use
a separate variable with spacer rests and put the staff changes (+ stem
directions + ...) in there:
\extra = { s1*2 \change Staff = "right" s1*2 ... \change Staff = "left"
s1*2 } etc...
then add that
Hallo Jan-Peter,
Thanks for the clarification. I had hoped it would be possible in some
other way. Hopefully it will be possible in a future version of the EE.
Until then I'll do it the old-fashioned way (manually).
Auke
Op 15 augustus 2018 07:50:57 schreef Jan-Peter Voigt :
Hello Auke,
Hello Auke,
yes you are right, \change Staff cannot be used with the EE. Some time
ago I tried to make it possible, but it results in a fatal crash of
lilypond if the EE sends such an event. I add this to the issues.
Jan-Peter
Am 14.08.2018 um 21:51 schrieb Partitura Organum:
> Hello all,
>
Hello Auke
Am 14.08.2018 um 21:51 schrieb Partitura Organum:
Hello all,
In organ music it is quite common that one of the hands plays a part
that is either to high or to low for theĀ 'common' clefs, but that can
be perfectly rendered with the alto clef. Not many organists are still
able to
Hello all,
In organ music it is quite common that one of the hands plays a part
that is either to high or to low for theĀ 'common' clefs, but that can
be perfectly rendered with the alto clef. Not many organists are still
able to read the alto clef, so I usually make to versions, one with the