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From: | Wim van Dommelen |
Subject: | Re: One staff, two voices |
Date: | Sun, 28 Oct 2012 11:21:27 +0100 |
Hi Janrek, Thanks for pointing to the Tiny Examples section. Didn't know this existed, good idea. In programming it is a common method to squeeze your problem to something as small as possible. Also a good start for any regression test. But the top part of the example shown uses an include-file. That is not "tiny", anything can happen there. So I would add to the rules for a tiny example no use of include files. And the page tells about an example? What example you want: - what this example of a problem produces (everyone can grab the code and see for himself, but showing it right away is much, much faster for everyone) - what the author wants to happen (likes something not accomplished but desired) - or both (my preference) And how does one place an example there? (and remove when not valid anymore, for example if your tiny tie-problem -- which is ugly indeed! -- is solved in a next version, this example may be updated with the text "Solved" and removed in the next run.) Regards, Wim. P.S. My tiny example: Wanted attached in a small example (not realized), code I think should produce it: \version "2.16.0" { \key f \major \time 4/4 \slashedGrace { \stemDown d'32[ c'] } \stemUp f32[c' f' g' a' g' f' c'] } On 28 Oct 2012, at 08:19 , Janek Warchoł wrote:
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