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From: | Peter Bjuhr |
Subject: | Re: Beam positions and time signature spacing |
Date: | Sat, 09 Nov 2013 17:07:14 +0100 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/24.1.0 |
What she measures is the stave-space. So, you can see her scale as a staff turned forward 90°. It's a direct relational measure it doesn't depend on fontsize or anything.
On 11/09/2013 03:52 PM, Gilberto Agostinho wrote:
Thanks for this one more scan, Peter. So have a look on how that compares to LilyPond: spacing.ly <http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/file/n153581/spacing.ly> <http://lilypond.1069038.n5.nabble.com/file/n153581/spacing.png> (I should have created a larger image, but that is too late now. Anyway, it is still possible to see the distances on my example above) The numbers in red are the ones that differ from your scan. Also note that the distance between the clefs and the time signatures is way larger in LilyPond when compared to her example. This is one what bothers my eye the most on all these examples, to be honest. I think that we should balance these distances, her examples are looking much better than the current output of LilyPond IMO. What do you think?
On a general term, I think LilyPond should adjust to contemporary music notation standards where applicable, and as far as I know Goulds book is today the most comprehensive account for contemporary standards that we have. It's the latest update to use a quasi software engineering phrase.
Best Peter
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