Ability to tell glissandos to have no text via style
It'd be pretty great if there was some style setting to globally disable the glissando "gliss." text instead of having to do it on a per-element basis. WDYT?
It'd be pretty great if there was some style setting to globally disable the glissando "gliss." text instead of having to do it on a per-element basis. WDYT?
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That I'd either add them all as default, and in the end right-click one of them to select all similar elements. Then turn of the text in the inspector with a single command, which will affect them all.
Alternatively, I'd add one to a score, style it as I want and then add it to a custom palette so it can be reused whenever required.
I think you have a good point. People usually want *all possible gliss. shown or none.
*Some glissandos are too short and the text will never show. The user either has to live with it or make the measure wider so the gliss. is visible.
+1.
If there were textless lines built into the palette that behave as these lines already do, this would also solve the problem. I'm presently seeking and not finding this. The various "slide" lines don't maintain their position well when I change the stretch. Are the two "gliss." options in the Arpeggios and Glissandos palette the only lines which do this?
For single instances it's easy enough to edit the text in the Inspector, but even so, a built-in "port." (portamento) line might get some mileage too. IMHO the only good reason to include the gliss./port./etc. text at all is to differentiate effects from each other. It's true that there often is no room for the text anyway, which can railroad the composer into notating inconsistently or unclearly. e.g. Good luck with "fingered gliss.", "harmonic gliss.", etc., hopefully they are only attached to whole notes.
The more different textless lines are available (thickness, straight/wavy, etc.) and the easier they are to differentiate visually the better, as it is easier to present an index at the beginning of the score assigning each of these effects their own type of line than to cram in all that text.
In reply to +1. If there were textless… by kacattac
You do have the option of creating a custom palette (I always use a custom palette) and putting the glissando with the text turn off or "port" into the palette to apply it to future notes. You can also change all selected glissandi in the same manner at once using the inspector.
For the portamento lines, you probably should just use a custom palette. For the turn off all glissando line text at once, you should submit a suggestion at https://musescore.org/en/node/add/project_issue?pid=1236
In reply to You do have the option of… by mike320
Thanks. I'm working on some posts and having/seeing some much larger issues.
Can you (or anyone else) confirm that there are no other lines in any of the palettes that anchor to noteheads the way that gliss. lines do? Also that there is no global editing of any member of the Lines palette nor the Arpeggios and Glissandos palette?
I tried and failed to do the Custom Palette thing (3.1 Beta). I changed a "gliss." line to say "harmonic gliss.," then Shift+Ctrl+dragged it to my "New Palette." When I entered it via this New Palette, the text just said "gliss." again.
In reply to Thanks. I'm working on some… by kacattac
There's "Note-anchored line"
In reply to Thanks. I'm working on some… by kacattac
The text not being in the custom palette certainly is a bug that should be reported at https://musescore.org/en/node/add/project_issue?pid=1236.
The note anchored lines are found only under the menu Add->Lines...