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Re: beginner stanza help
From: |
Steven Arntson |
Subject: |
Re: beginner stanza help |
Date: |
Tue, 09 Sep 2014 21:01:18 -0700 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.3 (gnu/linux) |
Samuel Speer <address@hidden> writes:
> No one's calling you an idiot.
>
> In your example, you create a variable called text and then define it
> as the first stanza. However, the second stanza is sort of just--
> hanging out there. Try renaming your first variable textOne and then
> before the second \lyricmode add textTwo = , then in your score you
> will add two lyric lines below the voice.
>
> textOne = \lyricmode {
>
> \set stanza = #"1. "
>
> here are | %m1
>
> the words | %m2
>
> }
>
> textTwo = \lyricmode {
>
> \set stanza = #"2. "
>
> here are | %m1
>
> more words | %m2
>
> }
>
> mySong = { c'2 d' e' f' }
>
> \score {
>
> <<
>
> \new Voice \mySong
>
> \addlyrics \textOne
>
> \addlyrics \textTwo
>
>>>
>
> }
Thanks for this, it helps. I'm struggling to understand this program
with very little background, and it is like spelunking without a
headlamp. Consequently, I fear asking questions that are not worth answering.
I thought I could get the entire "text" of the lyric entered as a single
variable, to keep my \score simple. Is it typical to break up a lyric
into several variables, and then reassemble them all in the \score block?
Part of my confusion stems from uncertainty regarding large form---how
to break things into variables and reassemble them in \score. I have no
sense of what the best practices are ... and, I admit, I have
not read the entire manual.
best,
steven arntson
Re: beginner stanza help, Simon Albrecht, 2014/09/10