Where's the guide for a new score

• Jun 25, 2018 - 12:25

I'm new here. I'm sure this question has been asked many times before so sorry but i am not sure where to turn. I opened a new score the other day, and it came with a guide but today when i open the score to start work on again, its not there, the guide that is. How I am supposed to learn how to use this tool if it disappears after the first time I use it.


Comments

Also part 2. I put in some notes and instead of being on the staff where i wanted them, they chose to go up an octave. How do i ensure they go in teh right space/line.

In reply to by chillinutmeg

When you enter a note, MuseScore puts it in the octave closest to the last note entered (usually). If there is no note entered yet, it puts the note as close to the B line as possible. If this is the wrong octave, press ctrl+ an up or down arrow to change the octave. If you are using the computer keyboard, this becomes second nature after a while and you get to where you know when MuseScore will enter the note in a different octave than you want.

There are two ways to work around this. 1. You can use the virtual keyboard (press P to toggle it). The disadvantage is that this is much slower than the computer keyboard, but can be useful if nearly every note is being entered in the wrong octave in a section of music. 2. You can use a Midi keyboard to enter the notes. The obvious disadvantage to this is the price. The advantage of both is that you can control the octave for every note, and the Midi keyboard gives you some extra note input methods.

The Getting Started guide is nice, and as mentioned, you can access it via the Start Center (F4 to display, or from the View menu). If it no longer shows in the list of recent scores, it will show up in the carousel at right.

As for "how am I supposed to learn", realize that the "Getting Started" document only scratches the surface, and much more help is available. See Help / Online Handbook, for instance. Also see the "Support" menu at the top of this page (or any page on this site), where there are more resources available. Also see my website

https://masteringmusescore.com/

In particular, you'll probably like the "Quick Answers" section: https://masteringmusescore.com/go/quick-answers. Also the "Your First Score" tutorial: https://masteringmusescore.com/tutorials/your-first-score/

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