Make Inspector to support multiple things
When you select something, e.g. a note, you see on Inspector panel there are various options, e.g. visible checkbox, colour picker alignment checkbox, etc. However, can I select a few measures of notes and set a different option to all the notes in those measures? I haven't found a way to that.
When you select one note, the options are shown on the inspector panel. However, when you select more than one note, those options are not shown on the inspector panel.
I wonder, why not show the common related options for users to use, so that I can just apply my settings to all the notes I want without repetitions.
Similarly, can I select more than one textboxes and do the same on the inspector? At the moment, I see that you can't select more than one textbox. I feel that this is kind of working against intuitivity.
Comments
Inspector does shows the settings that the various selected elements have in common. But in a range seletion that isn't much.
However, if in such a range selection you right-click e.g. one note heads, select all similar in selection, it shows those setting that apply to noteheads and you can change all in one go.
In reply to Inspector does shows the… by Jojo-Schmitz
I see! That works! Thanks...
But I think these are very messy steps to do something supposedly simple. LOL... Although this does work functionally, but it is still kind of an improvement issue ergonomically...
Just personal thoughts...
Not a lot can be done about, actually nothing. If you have a range selection there will be noteheads, stems, flage, beams, barlines, chord sysmbols, lyricsr etc... they don't have many settings in common, except visibility and color, and that's what the inspector shows
There is also a "Notes" button in the inspector that limits your selection to notes if you have a range selection, no need for right click, select...
In reply to There is also a "Notes"… by mike320
It is at the very bottom of the inspector panel; you might not see it if you don't know to look for it, but it is terribly important.