Am 26.04.2015 um 18:10 schrieb Michael Hendry:
On Sun,
Apr 26, 2015 at 06:15:13AM +0000, Keith OHara wrote:
Michael Hendry <hendry.michael <at> gmail.com>
writes:
I routinely put the bar
checks at the _beginnings_ of the bars,
thus...
| a4 b c d
| a8 b c d e f g a
| a16 b c d e f g a b c d e f g a b
That works very nicely.
When I had a measure that took more than one line of
input, I used to
try to make that clear by indenting the continuation line
a bit
further, but that was lost on any auto-indenting. Now I
can just
| \acciaccatura d,8 <b, g>4.(\ff )b8 a4.( )g8
| a4.( )c8 b4.( )a8
| \acciaccatura ais8 b8[-.\fz ]b-. b[-.\fz ]b-.
b[-.\fz ]b-. \acciaccatura ais8 b[-.\fz ]b-.
| <c, d b>8 r <c, c a>8\downbow r
\acciaccatura d, <b, g>2
and I can easily find my measures.
[...]
Am I the only
one who puts bar checks at *both* the beginning and end of
a bar?
| a4 b c d |
| e f g a |
Probably <G>.
Why would you want to check each bar twice?
These bar checks are mostly for humans to ease reading of the code,
not for machine interpreting.
Yours, Simon
|