"This in note entirely a regression. In MuseScore 3.7, the result is a whole note..."
I don't know how you did it, for my part, the result you describe, "a whole note per measure through the end of the score, all tied together", occurs in exactly the same way with version 4 (say 4.4.3), 3.7, 3.6.2.
And I'd be willing to bet that the behavior has always been the same since 3.5, the version where this feature was introduced. There must be some reason, which I don't know, but it's true that it's unexpected (and also harmless)
@cadiz1 Thanks for the confirmation ... and the video!
Indeed, when I start with a single note I now see the unexpected result also 3.6 and 3.7. Thank you for taking your observations that far.
So, um. Does this mean nobody ever used the Realize Chord Symbols function?
On the other hand, I replicated the single whole note result in MS3.7, but it was on selecting chord symbol attached to a single eighth note in a 16 bar score. I'll see if I can produce an example with replicable steps.
Comments
"This in note entirely a regression. In MuseScore 3.7, the result is a whole note..."
I don't know how you did it, for my part, the result you describe, "a whole note per measure through the end of the score, all tied together", occurs in exactly the same way with version 4 (say 4.4.3), 3.7, 3.6.2.
And I'd be willing to bet that the behavior has always been the same since 3.5, the version where this feature was introduced. There must be some reason, which I don't know, but it's true that it's unexpected (and also harmless)
See (with 3.6.2.)
In reply to "This in note entirely a… by cadiz1
@cadiz1 Thanks for the confirmation ... and the video!
Indeed, when I start with a single note I now see the unexpected result also 3.6 and 3.7. Thank you for taking your observations that far.
So, um. Does this mean nobody ever used the Realize Chord Symbols function?
On the other hand, I replicated the single whole note result in MS3.7, but it was on selecting chord symbol attached to a single eighth note in a 16 bar score. I'll see if I can produce an example with replicable steps.
scorster