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Interesting. I hadn't thought of that. Good lesson. All I was trying to do is
get the shapes generally right by using that music.ttf as a guideline. I hate
to think that when I render a musical type of image I have planned, a clarinet
because a niece of mine is starting in on that instrument, that I'll no doubt
get many things wrong. The least of which will be the notes. It would mix in
with the rest of my stuff well though :-)
Bob
"Phil Clute" <pcl### [at] tiacnet> wrote in message
news:38E7F04A.43A61F03@tiac.net...
| Nifty.
|
| I know you weren't trying to be perfect with your scoring technique,
| but incase your interested...
| When scoring notes that have stems: If the note is on or above the
| third line of the staff, the stem goes down and to the left side of
| the notehead. If it is below the third line, the stem goes up and to
| the right of the notehead. With regard to groups of notes that are
| beamed, majority rules. So if 4 eighth notes are beamed and the notes
| F, G and A are below the third line, but the 4th note B is on the third
| line(assuming there's a G clef), then the stems go up and to the right
| of the notehead. If 2 notes are above and the other 2 notes are below
| the third line, go with what looks good relative to any surrounding
| notes...
|
| And that concludes today's lesson. :)
|
| --
| Phil
| ...coffee?...yes please! extra sugar,extra cream...Thank you.
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