I can't open your score file. (The computer I installed 4.5.1 on has died :-( ) But I'm guessing you're using a linked staff to "clone" the piano? If so, how do you then disconnect them? Most commonly, I would think that you would "clone" an instrument only as a starting point. You would then change notes/rhythms/etc. Can't do that with a linked staff.
> I would think that you would "clone" an instrument only as a starting point. You would then change notes/rhythms/etc. <
I do not know the OP's full intention but now, for your particular case, I would C+P to make a "copy" as a starting point. This way, any changes will not be 'cloned'.
However, the OP wrote: "how to clone staff instrument".
Comments
Hit "I" and select the instrument. Clone?
In reply to Hit "I" ans select the… by bobjp
You cannot "clone" an instrument. Just add a second staff of the same instrument.
In reply to You cannot "clone" an… by TheHutch
Maybe they may mean to C+P one staff into another.
You wrote:
> how to clone staff instrument <
Open this file; Cloned pianos.mscz
Enter notes into one piano instrument and watch those notes get "cloned" into the other.
See:
https://handbook.musescore.org/notation/instruments-staves-and-systems/…
In reply to You wrote: . how to clone… by Jm6stringer
I can't open your score file. (The computer I installed 4.5.1 on has died :-( ) But I'm guessing you're using a linked staff to "clone" the piano? If so, how do you then disconnect them? Most commonly, I would think that you would "clone" an instrument only as a starting point. You would then change notes/rhythms/etc. Can't do that with a linked staff.
Or did you do something different?
In reply to I can't open your score file… by TheHutch
(my MuseScore 3.7 Evolution can open 4.x scores)
Yes, it is linked staves
In reply to I can't open your score file… by TheHutch
> I'm guessing you're using a linked staff to "clone" the piano? <
Ahh yes... the clue (I posted above):
https://handbook.musescore.org/notation/instruments-staves-and-systems/…
> I would think that you would "clone" an instrument only as a starting point. You would then change notes/rhythms/etc. <
I do not know the OP's full intention but now, for your particular case, I would C+P to make a "copy" as a starting point. This way, any changes will not be 'cloned'.
However, the OP wrote: "how to clone staff instrument".