Wim, thanks for the help--your solution worked best. To be honest, I
had thought that the tag solution looked promising, but I was
finding the NR (http://www.lilypond.org/doc/v2.16/Documentation/notation/different-editions-from-one-source#using-tags
) pretty dense. I think part of it was the fact that it explains
\keepWithTag and \removeWithTag in separate examples, but mostly it
was because I just didn't notice the part explaining the -\tag
#'your-tag syntax for articulations. :-P
Thanks, all!
DR
-----Original Message-----
From: Wim van Dommelen [mailto:address@hidden
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2012 6:20 AM
To: David Kastrup; Daniel Rosen
Cc: address@hidden
Subject: Re: Script objects avoid notes in other voices?
Use the tags for this problem, not different voices at all!
Daniel's example modified:
\version "2.16.0"
music = \relative c'' {
<b g'>-\tag #'part \upbow
<d d,>-\tag #'part \downbow
}
\keepWithTag #'part { \music }
Using this will NOT print the tagged strings in the score. Multiple
tags are possible, see the Notation Reference for more details.
Regards,
Wim.
In the music:
On 18 Oct 2012, at 00:21 , David Kastrup wrote:
Daniel Rosen <address@hidden> writes:
I'm trying to create a score and parts for a piece. I want to have
bow markings in the string parts but not the score, so I'm trying to
put them in a voice separate from the notes (ex. 1):
Don't do that. Put them in the same voice, or they won't combine
well.
\version "2.16.0"
<<
\new Voice { \music }
\new Voice { \bowing }
rather use
\new Voice << \music \bowing >>
--
David Kastrup
_______________________________________________
lilypond-user mailing list
address@hidden
https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user