Adding text more easily to the bottom of the music

• Aug 29, 2010 - 04:04

I would like to be able to add lines of text at the very bottom of the music such as reference lines or notes. So far the only way I have found to do this is to add some text like extra Composer or Subtitle then drag it to the bottom and change the font size. It would also be nice to be able to line up separate lines of text either by a grid or rulers and/or numerically.

Steven


Comments

Have you tried using the Copyright line? You can insert text as part of the copyright for notes. 'Create>Text>Copyright.' Is that sort of what you're going for?

It might be nice to have a ruler or grid for text...

In reply to by Calem Bendell_

You might using Staff Text (Create > Text) inside a Vertical Frame (Create > Measures).

The frame can be resized, depending on the amount of space you require.

The text won’t wrap to the dimensions of the frame, though, so you’ll need to break the lines manually.

In reply to by [DELETED] 448831

Thanks for responding folks. I have tried creating a Vertical Frame but it only creates one above the measure and I can't find any way to get it to go under a staff or to the bottom of the page. I don't know if that is possible. My only workaround is maybe just to do the music and bring it into Scribus and add the rest of the text along with any art I may want.

Steven

In reply to by [DELETED] 5

I consider myself a power user of MuseScore, but I don't get how to do this either. I opened and looked at the Schnee file that you recommended, and I see that it indeed has vertical frames at the bottom, but I can't for the life of me figure out how to get a vertical frame UNDER the bottom staff.

I even looked in the handbook, and it says: "Vertical frames provide empty space between or before systems." Nothing about after systems.

In reply to by ph

A horizontal frame adds horizontal space between measures. A vertical frame adds vertical space between measures.

The trouble with the words horizontal and vertical is they can be interpreted in different ways by different people. (Maybe you were thinking "horizontally shaped" which would give you the opposite impression). For a similar instance of this confusion see //musescore.org/en/node/3542 .

Do you have any suggestions for a unambiguous naming that avoids the words vertical or horizontal?

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