to solve it would be to run
touch *.ly
in the directory(ies) containing the Lilypond files to make them appear
modified. Perhaps someone else knows how to do it the right way.
- Thomas
On Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 4:24 PM, John McKay jzmc...@yahoo.com wrote:
I am working on a large project
to solve it would be to run
touch *.ly
in the directory(ies) containing the Lilypond files to make them appear
modified. Perhaps someone else knows how to do it the right way.
- Thomas
On Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 4:24 PM, John McKay jzmc...@yahoo.com wrote:
I am working on a large project
ote:
On GNU/Linux, an easy way to solve it would be to run
touch *.ly
in the directory(ies) containing the Lilypond files to make them appear
modified. Perhaps someone else knows how to do it the "right" way.
- Thomas
On Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 4:24 PM, John McKay <jzmc...@yaho
I am working on a large project involving hundreds of musical examples typeset
in Lilypond. So far, LyX has been great in handling them.
I have run into one issue. LyX seems to know if a Lilypond file hasn't
changed since the last output PDF was generated. If the Lilypond file hasn't
I am working on a large project involving hundreds of musical examples typeset
in Lilypond. So far, LyX has been great in handling them.
I have run into one issue. LyX seems to know if a Lilypond file hasn't
changed since the last output PDF was generated. If the Lilypond file hasn't
I am working on a large project involving hundreds of musical examples typeset
in Lilypond. So far, LyX has been great in handling them.
I have run into one issue. LyX seems to "know" if a Lilypond file hasn't
changed since the last output PDF was generated. If the Lilypond file hasn't