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Re: Quick question about accidentals
From: |
David Kastrup |
Subject: |
Re: Quick question about accidentals |
Date: |
Sat, 26 Nov 2016 17:52:51 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/25.1.50 (gnu/linux) |
David Sumbler <address@hidden> writes:
> Thanks for these 2 replies. I have tidied things up a bit by using
>
> \once \omit Accidental
>
> as suggested by Noeck.
>
> David's reply has given me several things to look up and think about
> (which is good!). The quoted "@", \single and \etc were all
> effectively new to me - although I must have read about them more than
> once in the NR. I don't think I understand them well enough even now,
> though, for me to have invented
>
> "@"=\single \omit Accidental \etc
Well, @ is just an arbitrary character that isn't used yet by LilyPond.
& would probably also have worked. \single converts an override (like
\omit Accidental) into the corresponding tweak. \etc cuts a music
function call short and results in a music function that expects the
remaining arguments. Sooo...
\omit Accidental is an override
\single \omit Accidental is incomplete syntax missing a tweak target
\single \omit Accidental \etc is a music function expecting such a target
So:
>> "@"=\single \omit Accidental \etc
>>
>> { @cis1 }
Of course you can write this @ cis1 as well. I was just aiming for a
single-character version.
--
David Kastrup