On 11/8/11 1:32 PM, "Tim Roberts"<address@hidden> wrote:
As I do more and more
LilyPond data entry, I find the skill set development to be
interesting. I've become pretty quick at data entry now,
including dynamics and articulation marks. I've become pretty good
at tweaking the output to get the effects I want.
The skill that is NOT developing, apparently, is the skill to keep
the relative octaves straight. Inevitably, my first test run ends
up going diagonally straight off the page in one direction or other,
with 20 or 30 ledger lines on each note.
Is there a simple mnemonic aid that can help me remember which part
of a given token is the one that carries forward? Individual notes
are easy. Within a chord is easy. I believe that the first note of
a chord then carries forward to the next token. But in polyphony
(with<< >>), is it the last note that carries forward
out of the polyphony?
If you are parsing notes, the last note parsed serves as the basis for the
next note.