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From: | Nick Payne |
Subject: | Re: Vertically aligning fret diagrams |
Date: | Tue, 14 Feb 2012 15:27:39 +1100 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:10.0) Gecko/20120129 Thunderbird/10.0 |
On 14/02/12 11:50, Carl Sorensen wrote:
On 2/13/12 3:13 PM, "Nick Payne"<address@hidden> wrote:If I have a succession of fret diagrams above the chords on a stave, how do I align the fret diagrams vertically. In the example below, the chord names at the top of all three fret diagrams are aligned vertically, but the fret diagrams for A and C have more space below the chord name and sit lower than that for G.The easiest way is to use the FretBoards context, rather than adding the fret diagrams as markups to notes. See Predefined fret diagrams in Notation Reference 2.4.1 Common notation for fretted strings for examples of the use of the FretBoards context.
Ok, thanks. If I do that, one thing I can't figure out from the documentation is how to indicate a barre if I'm using an automatic fret diagram. For example, If I replace
<< \context ChordNames { \chordmode { a1 } } \context Staff { \clef "treble_8" <a, e a cis' a'>1^\markup { \fret-diagram #"c:4-1-2;6-x;5-o;4-2-1;3-2-1;2-2-1;1-5-4;" } } >> where the barre is specified with c:4-1-2, and use instead << \context ChordNames { \chordmode { a1 } } \context FretBoards { <a, e a cis' a'> } \context Staff { \clef "treble_8" <a, e a cis' a'> } >> Then how do I indicate the barre in the FretBoards context? Regards Nick
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