Cornelius C. Noack skryf: > > (b) the answer to your problem is nevertheless simple: > musixTeX, and thus also PMX uses its own fonts for the > creation of musical scores, and therefore you can use only > the 2 (musical) font sizes that are presently available, > which are called 16 and 20 -- basta! (the exact answer is > a little more complicated: if you look at the font names > loaded into you TeX installation by musixTeX, you will see > some more fonts. But consider that you also need fonts for > grace notes etc, so just be content with the above). > > Perhaps some day one of our musixTeX specialists will come > up with a more flexible size handling system; but I doubt > it: it would be a sizable programming project, and I haven't > heard anyone complain loudly about this lack of > flexibility. In M-Tx (and therefore a fortiori in PMX) one can get 13pt, 16pt, 20pt, 24pt or 29pt notes. Easily. True, there are a few MusiXTeX instructions you need to give if you also want the annotations etc to look right.
If that is not good enough the answer is also simple. Suppose you want 32pt. Scale the page layout parameters (height, width, margins ... down by a factor 29/32. Then let a later program do the work. The attached example was made by $ prepmx bigger; pmxab bigger $ tex bigger; musixflx bigger; tex bigger $ dvips -x1200 bigger -o bigger.ps; ps2pdf bigger.ps Dirk
Title: Bigger, biggger Size: 29 PMX: w150m c d e f g a b g c0
---
\def\mtxversion{0.70b}
\def\mtxdate{<5 May 2005>}
\input mtx
\mtxTitleLine{Bigger, biggger}
---
1 -1 1 4 4 0 6 0.00000 0 1 1 20 0
0
./
\\mtxSetSize{1}{\mtxHugeSize}\
Tt
\mtxTitle
w150m
% Paragraph 2 line 0 bar 1
c44 d4 e4 f4 /
%Bar 2
g4 a4 b4 g4 /
%Bar 3
c0 /
% Coded by M-Tx
bigger.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document
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