Re: How can I get a repeat symbol in the chord names part of lead sheet?

2017-01-21 Thread jmechmech
Thanks, i have the same bug in this message and my answer : \version "2.18.2" chordNames = \chordmode { \repeat percent 2 { c1:7 } \repeat percent 4 { f4 } } melody = \relative c'' { \repeat percent 2 { c1 } \repeat percent 4 { c4 } } \score {

Re: How can I get a repeat symbol in the chord names part of lead sheet?

2017-01-20 Thread Flaming Hakama by Elaine
I didn't see this answered yet, so here is my reply... On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 7:45 PM, wrote: > -- Forwarded message -- > From: Rob Torop > To: lilypond-user@gnu.org > Cc: > Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2017 03:45:13 + > Subject:

Re: How can I get a repeat symbol in the chord names part of lead sheet?

2017-01-13 Thread Rob Torop
Thanks very much Pierre! On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 3:00 AM Pierre Perol-Schneider < pierre.schneider.pa...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Rob, > See: http://lsr.di.unimi.it/LSR/Item?id=908 > Cheers, > Pierre > > 2017-01-13 4:45 GMT+01:00 Rob Torop : > > I'm trying to figure out what

Re: How can I get a repeat symbol in the chord names part of lead sheet?

2017-01-13 Thread Klaus Blum
Hi Rob, Rob Torop wrote > I'm trying to figure out what to use for a chord name to get a "repeat" > (percent) sign over one of the measures. you could also try: % \version "2.18.2" chordNames = \chordmode { \repeat percent 2 {c1}

Re: How can I get a repeat symbol in the chord names part of lead sheet?

2017-01-13 Thread Pierre Perol-Schneider
Hi Rob, See: http://lsr.di.unimi.it/LSR/Item?id=908 Cheers, Pierre 2017-01-13 4:45 GMT+01:00 Rob Torop : > I'm trying to figure out what to use for a chord name to get a "repeat" > (percent) sign over one of the measures. Below is a complete small > example. I want C over

How can I get a repeat symbol in the chord names part of lead sheet?

2017-01-12 Thread Rob Torop
I'm trying to figure out what to use for a chord name to get a "repeat" (percent) sign over one of the measures. Below is a complete small example. I want C over the first measure, repeat over the second measure, and D over the third measure. I'm sure this is trivial - I just can't find it!