Editing Fret Diagram
In Musescore 3 it was easy to edit Fretboard Diagrams. Now I can't work it out. The instructions in the on-line manual are not correct. It says if you click on a diagram you get a properties menu on the side .. you don't. Furthermore I play the ukulele and don't want the default guitar diagrams but I cabn't remove them.
Comments
See: https://musescore.org/en/handbook/4/fretboard-diagrams
The Inspector panel of V3 has been replaced by the Properties panel in V4. So, editing fretboard diagrams is now done in the Properties panel (F8, or View / Properties) in the exact same way. See:
UkuleleJC, you're right, editing fretboard diagrams in MuseScore 4 can be a bit different from MuseScore 3.
ing Fretboard Diagrams in MuseScore 4 Select the Fretboard Diagram: Click on the fretboard diagram you want to edit in your score. Open the Inspector Panel There are two ways to do this Press F8 on your keyboard (this is the most common shortcut). Go to View menu > Inspector (or Format menu > Style > Inspector in some MuseScore versions).
The Inspector panel will now display the properties for the selected element, including the fretboard diagram. Here's what you can edit Strings Use the "Strings" spin box at the bottom left to adjust the number of strings displayed (ideal for ukuleles with 4 strings). Frets Use the "Frets" spin box at the bottom right to adjust the number of frets displayed. Finger Dots Click directly on the fretboard image to add finger dots where you want them on the strings. Click again to remove a dot. Barre/Partial Barre Hold Shift while clicking on a fret to create a barre. Click on the top of the barre to remove it.
https://www.ny-stateofhealth.com/
In reply to UkuleleJC, you're right,… by christy2951he
christy2951he: what you've described is the correct method for editing fretboard diagrams in version 3. Version 4 doesn't use the "Inspector Panel" but uses the "Properties" tab. As cadiz1 explained above.
In reply to christy2951he: what you've… by TheHutch
Please don't reply to a spammer (see link end of "message")
In reply to Please don't reply to a… by cadiz1
That's not a spam site. It's a part of the NY Department of Health, used by health providers rather than patients. I was suspicious too and looked it up before I posted. I've since seen their posts elsewhere: the person is clearly not a spammer, just adding this line to their posts. (I'm guessing automagically.)
However, christy2951he, you would be wise to explicitly remove that line from your posts. It makes people (like me and cadiz1) suspicious of them.
In reply to That's not a spam site. It's… by TheHutch
"just adding this line to their posts. (I'm guessing automagically.)"
Automagically? Really. How you do that in this forum?
In reply to "just adding this line to… by cadiz1
I don't know either, but see TomStrand's post below. That's what I was thinking of.
Automatic insertion of text or maybe links can happen if you write your response offline in a "company" application and then just copy and paste everything to this forum. We had this in my company, Airbus, as well.
This doesn't mean I trust all links I see.
In reply to Automatic insertion of text… by TomStrand
Me neither. That's why I googled the URL and found the info above.