Beaming of sixteenth and eighth note sequences in 4/4
4/4 time:
If an eighth note is on beat two and immediately preceded by a sixteenth note then it should start a new beam.
If an eighth note is on beat four and immediately preceded by a sixteenth note then it should start a new beam.
See attached file ("Eighth and sixteenth beams in 4-4.mscz") for details.
Attachment | Size |
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Eighth and sixteenth beams in 4-4.mscz | 2.36 KB |
Comments
fixed in r4223
Automatically closed -- issue fixed for 2 weeks with no activity.
hi,
i'm in 1.1, revision 4611. the issue persists
mindless.inertia,
The issue is fixed in the nightly trunk builds (development for version 2.0). For further explanation see http://musescore.org/en/handbook/comparison-stable-prerelease-and-night…
(Tested using revision 4851 trunk, Windows 7)
shouldn't it get fixed for 1.2 AKA branch too then?
Beaming decision touches the heart of MuseScore. We don't want to make big changes in MuseScore 1.2 to avoid regressions.
I'm currently having this problem in version 1.2 Rev. 5470.
no wonder, it hasn't been fixed there. It has been fixed in trunk though, so will be fixed in the upcoming version 2.0
Thanks. What could I download now that would include a fix to this bug? The latest nightly build? Or maybe a pre-release version?
the nightly build
But see http://musescore.org/en/handbook/comparison-stable-prerelease-and-night… first
I'm trying the latest nightly build with a couple simple scores created in v 1.2. The first score loaded up and the beaming across beats seemed to correct itself. For instance, in one staff I have mixed 1/8 and 1/16 notes and in the first score in v1.2 beaming would cross beats but now in the nightly build it only beams the notes within each beat. But, the second score - no self-correction. And it does some really strange things. For example, if I change the instrument playing the drum set part, beaming changes in another staff playing with another instrument. In fact, little changes here and there will change the beaming in other parts, and then change back, and then change again, and on and on...