Piano pedal marking - looks bad when starting new line
Hi, sorry if this has been discussed before but I'm adding pedalling to a piano accompaniment from the lines pallette. When I extend the line (shift+right arrow) and the pedal extends to the next system I get the word "ped" in brackets, which appears right across the line, and looks messy. See attached screenshot. Is there a way round this or is a known problem, please. Ideally I would like there just to be the line with no "(ped)".
Many thanks!
Comments
Click it, by Inspector set the text
In reply to Click it, by Inspector set… by Shoichi
Fantastic! Thank you. I unchecked "Continue text" and it disappeared. A million thank yous.
And a side note (not about the question you're asking; and it doesn't cause the problem in question): As far as I can tell from the picture, there may be an overlap here, because the "Start text" (Ped. _) here looks bolder than the others (maybe it was added twice by double clicking instead of one).
In reply to Select the pedal line you… by Ziya Mete Demircan
Hi Ziya - now that is interesting because I agree, one of the peds looked bolder than the other. However I checked and I only had one instance of the pedal markings. But then look at this screenshot - again the third pedal marking looks bolder, however I only added each one once. Strange.
In reply to Hi Ziya - now that is… by Jon Ray
Score needed...
In reply to Score needed... by Jojo-Schmitz
OK
A Pause for Thought - flute EXTRACT.mscz
In reply to OK [inline:A Pause for… by Jon Ray
Very strange, got to be some kind of issusion, if you zoom in the effect vanishes
In reply to Very strange, got to be some… by Jojo-Schmitz
I add line breaks and the one in detra is always a little different.
Edit: Try dragging the page around.
In reply to Hi Ziya - now that is… by Jon Ray
Perhaps this issue occurs during the DPI adjustment (and/or anti-aliasing) process when exporting.
This phenomenon also appears in the first "Ped" mark when exported as PNG. // (DPI: 90)
In reply to Perhaps this problem is… by Ziya Mete Demircan
Hmm, strange. I'm amazed no-one's noticed this before. Is it not a known problem then?