Disappearing Clef
Hey everyone, not sure if this is a bug or I'm doing something wrong...
I'm running into this thing where I'm changing the clef - and it disappears when I insert a line break(as you can see in the first example). In the second example, when I remove the break, the clef is clearly visible. But the clef has been there the whole time, for some reason, the line break makes it vanish.
Any thoughts? I'll attach a picture of the problem and also the mscz file.
Attachment | Size |
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Ash and Elm 7-18.mscz | 22.44 KB |
Clef.png | 70.81 KB |
Comments
Until someone comes along with a better answer, try not using line breaks. I think the part is readable with out them.
As per your settings in Format / Style / Page, you have turned off the display of clefs for any but the first system. Just turn it back on.
In reply to As per your settings in… by Marc Sabatella
Thanks for the suggestion! That does work... but then I end up with clefs in every single line, which is not really necessary. When I check the box to "create courtesy clefs" I do get a clef, but it's placed before my new section, instead of at the beginning of it.
In reply to Thanks for the suggestion!… by maxwellbyrnem
If a score employs changing clefs, wouldn't the assurance of seeing a clef on each line be a good idea?
In reply to If a score employs changing… by Jm6stringer
Good point, but it only changes in the very beginning and then stays the same, so it feels a bit like overkill.
In reply to Good point, but it only… by maxwellbyrnem
It's not overkill at all - it's absolutely how music is normally published. I know there were some infamous college-student-produced fakebooks back in the 70's that omitted clefs regularly even for pieces that changed clef, but it's not considered good practice at all. Those college students did it because they didn't have the advantage of notation software to calculate correct spacing - omitting clefs and keys allowed them to just divide the staff into four equal measures before adding notes, which simplified the process when doing things by hand. But it's unnecessary and unhelpful today. Especially, as noted, in music with clef changes. It's a recipe for confusion, as musicians are likely to not notice the clef change. And if there are repeats (including DC or DS), good luck guessing which clef is in effect when jumping back if you can't just scan back to the beginning of the line.
If the idea is to show a bass line up front as an intro then switch to the melody alone, the better way to do this is to have two staves - treble and bass - for the intro, then switch to treble alone after that (using Format / Style / Hide empty staves within systems). And actually, that approach works even if you wish to not show the treble for the intro.
Anyhow, if you still wish to not show the clefs, you could add a section break after the intro, which will force the next system to be treated more like the start of a new piece, including clef etc. You would probably want to disable the other options in the section break properties so it doesn't restart measure number, indent, etc.
In reply to It's not overkill at all -… by Marc Sabatella
Awesome, thanks for the comprehensive response... score is looking good now!