"Maximum barline distance" for Chord Symbols

• May 23, 2016 - 11:09

According to the handbook, the "Maximum barline distance" for chord symbols is "The space to allow before barline." But in practice, altering this value does not seem to lead to a corresponding change in the visible distance between a chord symbol and a barline in the score. Something seems to be happening but it is not clear what.

So, how does this property work?


Comments

It's a bit confusing I agree. What is happening is that MuseScore tries to automatically add space to a measure as necessary so that chord symbols *within* the measure don't collide, but for various reasons, this system cannot currently work *across* measures. So if there is a chord symbol at the end of one measure, it can cross the barline and collide with the first chord symbol in the *next* measure.

The parameter in question controls what happens in cases where a chord symbol is potentially too long to fit within a measure. We will add padding as necessary *up to the amount specified in that parameter". So with that parameter set to 0sp, no space whatever is added:

chord-barline-1.png

That's fine since there is no chord at the beginning of the next bar, but would lead to a collision if a chord was present there. Since we cannot currently deal with this case automatically, we allow you to specify you want space added. A small amount is added by default as a hedge, so that "most" chord symbols will fit:

chord-barline-2.png

This won't be enough space for longer chord symbols however:

chord-barline-3.png

If this just happens occasionally in your score, you can adjust things manually. If you have a lot of this sort of thing, however, you might prefer we always allocate extra space. So you can turn up this parameter to say allocate space as necessary, up to this amount. So setting it to an outrageously high number like 100sp means, allocate as much is actually needed, up to a maximum of 100sp (which you will probably never hit):

chord-barline-4.png

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