SEVERE BUG - can't click on most invisible items

• Jan 15, 2024 - 23:57

I've written several notes and pieces of expression text that are useless to the jazz musicians I'm going to give the score, but are useful to me in order to hear something close to what they might play.
Now, those elements are unclickable. And for the notes and rest, that's okay, I can just select the measure then press V. But for text, like the Swing indicator, now it's stuck there and I can't make any changes.
Should I try to export to MusicXML and open in MS3.6?


Comments

More precisely, I seems the reliable way to trigger the bug is to try to right click a highlighted invisible item. That will instantly deselect it and make it impossible to click again.

In reply to by bobjp

I found the workaround of clicking the next visible item of the same type (or placing a new one), and navigating with alt+arrows, then making the invisible element visible again. That makes rightclick work again. The visibility is definitely the discriminating factor

I was going to report this issue, but a quick search led me to this thread.

I can confirm that this issue continues in MuseScore Studio (4.4.4.xxx).

In the attached score, the marking in M1 can be easily clicked and edited as normal/expected. The marking in M2 is not immediately accessible. If I do manage to select the marking, I get one shot at doing something with it. If I click somewhere away from the marking, it is unresponsive.

Attachment Size
Temp marking test.mscz 17.79 KB

In reply to by Pentatonus

Interesting.

Just to check what may be happening:
Are you able to toggle the visibility without difficulty?
Can you return to the invisible marking repeatedly? On my system, (Win 11), I can only "touch" an invisible item once before it becomes unresponsive.

It appears that this may be a system-specific issue, which is odd, because my computer has been very stable with most reported MS issues.

Thanks for confirming that this is not a universal MS issue.
I find it interesting that so few users have this specific problem.

In reply to by bobjp

Curious.

As someone else mentioned, there are workarounds, so this is not a huge issue for me. My workaround is to select the measure containing the invisible marking and hit "V". This does not, as I might expect, make the whole measure invisible, but toggles just the tempo marking. This is odd, but I can live with it.

[EDIT] Just playing around before I hit send on this comment:
1. If nothing is already marked invisible, selecting the whole measure and pressing V makes everything invisible. This is as expected.
2. If the whole measure is marked invisible, selecting and pressing V makes everything visible. This is also as expected.
3. If only the tempo marking is invisible, selecting the measure and pressing V toggles the visibility of only the marking. I don't believe this is the expected behaviour. Is it?

I generally don't hide markings until I am ready to issue parts to musicians anyway, so this has only a minor impact on my workflow.

In reply to by cadiz1

I'm'a guess that they expected a simple toggle: everything that is visible becomes invisible and everything that is invisible becomes visible.

They should compare MS Word and boldface: When you select a range that includes some bold and some not, clicking the Bold button (or pressing Ctrl+B) doesn't toggle the text, it simply turns on bold for the entire selection.

In reply to by cadiz1

The answer to this question points to the particular problem that we are addressing.
The problem is selecting (and editing) invisible objects.

For users experiencing this problem, when we select a measure containing a hidden object, the notes in the measure appear to be selected. The hidden object still appears to be inaccessible. Because of these appearances, the expectation would be that toggling visibility would affect the notes.

If you are not experiencing this issue, this workaround may seem counterintuitive. All I can say is that it works the way I have described it, though the description itself may be confusing.

Cheers

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