bug when switching notes between staves?
hey folks
when i move a note from the treble clef to bass clef in a score, the note seems to 'remember'; it came from a differennt staff. for instance - in the attached file -the first note in voice 1 - the 'g' in the bass clef - was successfully moved to the bass clef, but if you move the note up or down in pitch, it 'jumps' back to the first clef. Also, if you try and highlight the note, it stretches the hightlight to include the treble clef.
there are other behaviors it does as well. For instance - chaznge it from an eight note to a quarter note, and the new rest gets created in the TREBLE clef, not in the bass clef, where the note is.
is this a bug? am i not moving notes between staves correctly (I use the cntrl shift combo)
thanks
Attachment | Size |
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test.mscz | 7.39 KB |
Comments
No bug. octave higher/lower is Ctrl+up/down arrows. You most likely pressed Shift+Ctrl+up/down as that is cross-staff notation.
In reply to No bug. octave higher/lower… by Sunny2019
You are moving notes correctly if you want to have something like a scale that starts in the upper staff but ends in the lower staff and is connected by a beam between the two staves. The notes continue to "belong" to the stave where they were first entered but show up on the stave you have moved them to. If you just want to move a note from one staff to another but have no need for a beam to connect it to the other stave then just cut and paste. The ctrl shift arrow manoeuvre is a bit of a kludge to enable cross-staff beaming and should not really be used unless that is what you want.
In reply to You are moving notes… by SteveBlower
ok thanks. I thought there was a command to actually Permanently Move the note from staff a to staff b, breaking all linkage to the previous staff. Unfortunately for me, i have a very long score that has some serious corruption in it after a midi import (about 90 measures) and i need to do some moving around. The cut n past isnt really an option, because of corrupted measures the corruption is moving with the cut n paste (usually issues where the measure has an incorrect amount of beats).
thanks anyway!
In reply to ok thanks. I thought there… by ptrtool1999
It might be easier to copy and paste whole measures then delete the bits you don't want in the upper and lower staves.
In reply to ok thanks. I thought there… by ptrtool1999
Cut(!) and Paste is just that tool to break that link
In reply to Cut(!) and Paste is just… by Jojo-Schmitz
i understand - but the voices overlap, so i first need to implode/explode, and even then about 1/2 the stuff isnt working. Its mostly jazz, so there are a lot of 4 voice measures in a single stave as the timing overlaps. Very time consuming.
thanks for your help.
In reply to i understand - but the… by ptrtool1999
Judging by your posted 'test.mscz' example, it seems that you are not merely transcribing an actual piano score. The illogical use of cross-staff notation coupled with the weird voice assignments, along with you (just now) mentioning a need to implode/explode indicates a bigger picture - like maybe you are trying to create a piano reduction of an ensemble score?
I don't know, however...
There is no bug in cross-staff notation. MuseScore keeps track of the 'true location' of notes. To confirm, click on a note and verify in the Status Bar. (https://musescore.org/en/handbook/viewing-and-navigation#status-bar)
So, for example, in your posted 'test.mscz' file, clicking on the whole note in the bass clef (Staff 2) of measure 3 shows:
Note; Pitch E3; Duration: Whole; Voice: 2; Measure: 3; Beat: 1; Staff 1 (Piano).
To get that E3 permanently into the bass clef, thus breaking the linkage to Staff 1, you cut and paste (as already mentioned).
Not a bug, but by design. Cross staff notes still belong to their staff, they just show on the other
Cross-staff notation moves the note visually to make it easier or clearer for the (usually piano) player. The note's duration, pitch etc. is still part of the Stave and Voice from which it came. I can think of all kinds of programming confusion if this were not the case.
So if you really want to move the note from one staff to another and not visually displace it only; use cut and paste.
In reply to So if you really want to… by jeetee
Depending on the situation, it might be easier to just re-enter the note where you want it. You have to fix both measures anyway.