TRIPLETS!!!

• Apr 16, 2011 - 04:24

Thank you so much for the software, it's really pretty and really easy to use.
A feature that is really lacking is triplet notes. Please release a patch with triplets, I really need them.


Comments

In reply to by Boris_

As Marc said, you really need to read the manual on how to do triplets well. Basically, you select a note (or rest) and the triplet command will produce triplets of half the note value selected. So a quarter note produces eighth triplets, a half note will produce quarter note triplets, etc. It takes some getting used to.

HOW TO WRITE TRIPLETS:
A “quarter” note will produce 3 “eight” note triplets; a “half’ note will produce 3 “quarter” note triplets. So, before writing the triplet choose the right value note or rest where the triplet will start. Once it is highlighted, press “Ctrl” plus the number “3”. An upper bracket with the number 3 will appear on top, and under it three “eight” rest. Enter now the three “eight” notes under each “eight” rest.

Attachment Size
Triplets 1.jpg 111.06 KB

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

I was 15 when I posted that thread and I'm still signed up for email notifications it seems. Always strange to find comments from when I was younger on things I've completely forgotten about.

https://xkcd.com/979/

Funny how many times I've googled something and found some forum result of someone with the exact same problem but they dont comment the solution to their problem after they find it, and yet I was one of those people. This thread seems to be the first google result for "musescore triplets", so a bump is totally reasonable.

Nice to see musescore still going, I remember liking it. Too bad I can't edit my original comment to be more helpful.

In reply to by Boris_

It doesn't matter how old some tip is. When you need an answer, you need an answer. It's a good thing to contribute whatever solutions you find to a problem. Somebody out there might need it. Like me. I never check the date on a tip. It doesn't matter. If it works, it works. This program is very complicated and I can use all the help I can find.

In reply to by myoleman

The only problem with referring to a 7 year old post is that the version back then was 1.x while today MuseScore is on version 2.1 (very soon to release 2.2). There are features to make notation much easier in versions 2.x and a few features that have been abandoned from 1.x.

In reply to by mike320

Anyway, this is the first comment or question you find whenever you google "triplets", so whoever is looking into it (like I was) will find the answer right here. The Manual is too long to read it all, and besides, you rarely need things like "triplets" or brackets or grace notes, etc. But when you do, it's faster to just google the question and find whatever solution have been posted out there. At least that's what I always do.

In reply to by myoleman

The tuplets are one of essential features of a scorewriter that are necessary for any contemporary classical composer. The music of nowadays makes the broad usage of tuplets marked not only by a single digit, but, more often than not, by a ratio (5:3, 7:4 etc.) For example, look at scores of Pierre Boulez or Iannis Xenakis available in some score-videos of their works at YouTube. - Why are ratio tuplets needed? - might ask one. Answer: - single-digit tuplets are usable when a SINGLE duration is substituted by a tuplet. But if the duration isn't single, but COMBINED (like in a guarter tied with following sixteenth that might be not reduced to a single one), one cannot use a tuplet substituting it marked by single digit - only with ratios like 3:5, 4:5, 7:5 etc. etc. So, if a scorewriter doesn't have the ratio option for making tuplets, it remains underdeveloped and, in spite of all its other really essential and important advantages over commercially available Sibelius and Finale, still might not be in broader use by advanced composers of today.
I might also add that, as of now, no scorewriter but Finale has the option of continuing tuplet over barline if it is not fitting the reminding rhythm value before that barline, but means COMBINED duration divided by the barline. I wish MuseScore developers to include this very essential option into next version of the soft. And, besides of tuplet subject, include an option of instant, on the fly change 5-lines staff into 4,3,2,1,0-line ones if it is
deemed necessary for an user.

In reply to by Leonid Hrabovsky

To be clear, MuseScore does allow ratios to be used, not sure if you were under the impression they weren't. See the Inspector upon selecting a tuplet for the options to control its appearance.

Tuplets over barlines are indeed more problematic, but can sometimes be "faked" reasonably effectively in a number of ways (eg, combining the bars and adding a fake barline, or building the tuplet then moving the notes around manually). Definitely room for improvement though.

Meanwhile, you'll be happy to hear that changing staff properties such as number of staff lines mid-score is already implemented for the next major release, MuseScore 3.

In reply to by Leonid Hrabovsky

Tuplet Properties? Are you perhaps using an extremely old version of MuseScore? There is no such dialog in current versions (eg. 2.2.1) - it's all in plain view in in the Inspector.

As for the font used, that is easily controllable via Style / Text / Tuplet. Thickness of line appears to not be controllable in current versions, but will be in MuseScore 3.

In reply to by Leonid Hrabovsky

If you make one of these non standard tuplets that cross a bar line and there are more than one instrument, you will need to insert bar lines in all of the other instruments because the same measures are joined in every instrument. If there is an instrument in the middle of a multi measure rest when you do this, you will need add a measure to the measure count in the measure properties to make up for the now missing measure. I'm not 100% sure it will make the number of measures correct in a multi measure rest. If this does not work, you will instead need to find a convenient spot in the multi measure rest to split another measure and hide the extra bar line in the other instruments.

Do you still have an unanswered question? Please log in first to post your question.