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From: | Simon Albrecht |
Subject: | Re: \hide c4 hides note head only |
Date: | Wed, 08 Apr 2015 00:38:07 +0200 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:31.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/31.6.0 |
Am 07.04.2015 um 23:43 schrieb Dan Eble:
Well, I think it’s rather a question of syntax: by definition, a tweak before a note refers to the note head, else you’d have to explicitly give a grob name, as is custom with \hide:On Apr 7, 2015, at 00:23 , Pierre Perol-Schneider <address@hidden> wrote:2015-04-07 3:35 GMT+02:00 Dan Eble <address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>: % Is this supposed to leave a stem showing? \version "2.19.17" \hide c''4 Yes, because equivalent to: \version "2.19.17" { \tweak transparent ##t c''4 } (AFAIK)Equivalence doesn’t really answer the question. Why would a transparent C have a stem?
\hide Stem \hide c''4Or use \hideNotes c''4 \unHideNotes, which would be the more obvious choice here. And: I’m sure that there are situations in which people would want a note without a note head. Only personally I’d probably not have thought of omitting the grob name to go with \hide… :-)
Yours, Simon
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