What do the "snap to grid" buttons do in the Inspector?

• May 29, 2016 - 10:35

This is the handbook entry:

"Also in Inspector you can toggle the 'Enable snap to grid' buttons, resulting in the moves being in steps of a certain space fraction (the same steps as if using the scroll button in Inspector)" ("Align elements ").

As far as I can see, enabling "snap to grid" in the Inspector makes no difference to the way that you move, say, Staff text. If you press a keyboard arrow it still moves 0.1 sp. If you press [Ctrl] + arrow, the text moves 1 sp.

So what does "Enable snap to grid" do?


Comments

From the handbook:
When selecting and dragging an element...

So, for Staff text, mouse dragging (not keyboard arrow) is in increments of 0.50 space - same increments as using the 'spin box' scroll button.

Regards.

In reply to by geetar

Yes, so it seems...

The precision of the Inspector's horizontal and vertical offset is to 2 decimal places.
Using 'snap to grid' allows for more consistent element positioning when manually dragging - so that, for example, some score elements - e.g. to avoid collisions - are not dragged 1.18sp and others on the same staff 1.22 sp. All can be more easily dragged and aligned to a consistent 1.20 by snapping to grid.
In a score with a (very) large scaling size, with 'snap to grid' enabled, the *jerky* (rather than smooth) dragging motion is more obvious.

(And, of course, using arrow keys or Inspector offsets for fine tuning a score element's placement is probably the more preferred method.)

Regards.

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