Thanks a lot Lukas,
overriding mensural staff is an optimal solution, but have a look in future to baroque music transcriptors, like me…
Best,
Mario
Mario Bolognani mario.bolognani@gmail.com
Il giorno 30 dic 2022, alle ore 18:05, Lukas-Fabian Moser <lfm@gmx.de> ha scritto:
Hi Mario,Am 30.12.22 um 17:37 schrieb Mario Bolognani:Hi Lukas,
this is the example where I’m using \numericTimeSignature
\new Staff << \set Staff.instrumentName = \markup \center-column{""} \incipit { \clef soprano \key do\major\time 3/2\numericTimeSignature r2.^\markup \right-align"[Soprano]"} \clef violin \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"voice oohs" \IIIsoprano \set Staff.shortInstrumentName = "sop" \new Lyrics \lyricsto "sovrana" \IIItesto >>
Please always aim for short-yet-compilable examples like:\version "2.24.0"\language italiano\new Staff \with { instrumentName = ""} << \incipit { \clef soprano \key do\major \numericTimeSignature \time 3/2 r2.} la4>>At any rate: Yes, this is a complicated case. We noted that the change to \numericTimeSignature (which I made in order to make it work on the score-wide timing) stops it from working in MensuralStaff contexts, and incipits internally use a MensuralStaff, as Jean explained.You can replace \numericTimeSignature by \override MensuralStaff.TimeSignature.style = #'numbered, or - if you want to have it for your whole score - you can also do:\layout { \context { \MensuralStaff \numericTimeSignature }}I think the proper fix would be to make \incipit configurable: It's not self-evident to me that incipits should always be created in mensural style (but it is of course a sensible default, given the editing tradition of Renaissance music.)Lukas
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