Squeezing several full measures into one line

• Aug 28, 2019 - 00:24

Hello,
This may seems strange, but I am wondering if I could force several measures that are extremely
full into one line. I don't care how the top line looks, I just want several measures to appear on one line.
I tinkered with all of the settings I could find through documentation and forum searches.
This would really help me. Thanks!
sample_1.png

Attachment Size
64ths_test.mscz 32.99 KB
sample_1.png 28.65 KB

Comments

These notes are already about as close together as they possibly can be without overlapping. You can reduce all the settings in Format / Style / Measure to 0 to squeeze things a little closer still, but you can't change the laws of physics - if a note is "X" millimeters wide, and the staff is "Y" millimeter wide, you can't fit more than Y/X notes on that staff.

In reply to by Alex Shen1

If how the top parts looks isn't important, then the real solution is to make the staff invisible, then it won't affect the spacing of the other staves at all. Do this in Edit / Instruments.

If for some reason that isn't an option, it would help if you took a step back to explain the actual goal here, then maybe we can help you find the best way to achieve it.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

I tried making every aspect of that staff invisible, but it seems to still effect the layout. Perhaps I went wrong about it? I right clicked and selected "staff properties" and unchecked everything as well as in advanced options. I also made key sign and time sig invisible.
What would you recommend?

In reply to by Ziya Mete Demircan

Hi Again,
Is it possible (While leaving the notes visible) to cram all the notes together without having to select them one by one?
I tried stretching, playing with measure sizes, distances between notes, etc.
But the only way I can actually cram it like this is by clicking a note, and moving it with the arrow keys.
To literally make something like this:

Attachment Size
sample 3.png 11.78 KB

In reply to by Alex Shen1

It would, again, help if you explained your actual goal here, so we can help you look at the big picture and figure out the best way of actually achieving the goal rathter than merely the best way to complete one particular step that may or may not turn out to be necessary once we understand the goal

That said, sure, you can create ugly looking things like that easily. For instance, select the range, hit the Notes button in the Inspector to limit the select to just notes, then decrease the "Leading space" for all at once. You could create a whole page of this in about five seconds flat.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

The goal would be hard for me to type out. I am doing some testing for a project, and one of the tests would benefit if I could do this.
Thanks for the suggestion - I went through the entire leading space range from positive to negative but it only seems to be able to bring the notes closer, while what I really need is for them to actually overlap:

Attachment Size
sample 4.png 47.93 KB

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

The effort isn't wasted. The problem I am trying to solve is as I described it. I require one line to have tons of notes, and the other to have the main melody. While adjusting the display such that the display of the main melody is proper while disregarding that of the tons of little notes.
I wish you would take my word that its not practical for me to explain exactly why I need to run this specific test, because to lay out the context would be an essay in itself. I am running different tests that require certain parameter changes in musescore. And this happens to be one in which I ran into a problem. Resizing the score to make it fit, creates an extremely large file, making the notes invisible causes another area of the test to fail, and this is where I realized I need the entire score to be visible but force a horizontal fit of the 'ugly' line.
Thanks for your time Marc.

In reply to by Marc Sabatella

I'll try to be more descriptive:

I'll create an exaggerated example to express what I need. Suppose I want to create a digital recording that contains two lines of music. One has a slow beautiful melody, and the other has 1,000 notes per measure. assume that's what was necessary to create the desired effect. Next, I would want to print the sheet music such that both lines remain visible on the page but only the melodic line is regarded when considering aesthetics. Of course this would mean that the 1000 notes would have to be scrunched up together beyond comprehension. Why would one want to do this? I guess they wouldn't, I know notation software is not specifically designed to do that kind of work. But this is the best way I can describe what I need. I suppose you could say that I can create the digital file and then manually copy paste the 'ugly' stuff. But of course, that would defeat the purpose of my wanting to know if MuseScore is capable of doing this. Thanks.

In reply to by Alex Shen1

Sorry, that still leaves the most important question unanswered, of what the actual goal is. That way we can help you find better solutions that are actually easy and still accomplish the goal.

It's like you keep asking, which bus from Boston to Paris is fastest, when it turns out your actual goal is to get to New York but you were under the mistaken impression you had to do it by way of Paris for some reason. Until we know what the actual goal is, we can't begin to guess the better way of getting there.

That said, based on a literal read, to get from Boston to Paris by bus in this analogy, set the staff size of the 1000-note-per-line music to be appropriately tiny. It will be just as unreadable as what you're asking for, but it fulfills the stated requirement completely and perfectly. Or if the goal is to actually be able to read the music, print on sufficiently paper, as suggested before. Lots of possible solutions, but once again, we can't begin to know what is best until we understand your actual goal.

Anyhow, if you want to actually solve the problem, we are happy to help, but we need to understand in order to be of much use. Or you can keep trying to find that bus from Boston to Paris. Your choice.

In reply to by Alex Shen1

You can select all the notes in a measure (select the measure and click the notes button in the inspector) then make the leading space value a negative number. This will compress the notes as much as can be done. It seems from my experience that about -1.5 is the most that will work, but there may be other factors that affect this number.

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