User manual

Table Of Contents
536
The MIDI editors
Score Editor operations
Interpretation Options
These provide additional options for how the score is displayed:
Applying your settings
After you have made your settings, click Apply to apply them to the active staff. You
can select another staff in the score and make settings for that, without having to
close the Staff Settings dialog first – just remember to click Apply before you change
staff, otherwise your changes will be lost.
Entering notes with the mouse
To enter notes into a part in the Score Editor, you use the Note tool. However, first you
need to set the note value (length) and spacing.
Selecting a note value for input
This can be done in two ways:
By clicking the note symbols on the extended toolbar.
You can select any note value from 1/1 to 1/64th and turn on and off the dotted and
triplet options by clicking the two buttons to the right. The selected note value is
displayed in the Length value field on the toolbar and in the Note tool cursor shape.
By selecting an option from the Length Quantize pop-up menu on the toolbar.
Parameter Description
Clean Lengths When this is activated, notes that are considered to be chords will be
shown with identical lengths. This is done by showing the longer
notes as shorter than they are. When Clean Lengths is turned on,
notes with very short overlaps are also cut off; a bit as with No
Overlap (see below), but with a more subtle effect.
No Overlap When this is activated one note will never be shown as overlapping
another, lengthwise. This allows long and short notes starting at the
same point to be displayed without ties; the long notes are cut off in
the display. This will make the music more legible.
An example measure with No Overlap deactivated…
…and with No Overlap activated.
Syncopation When this function is activated, syncopated notes are shown in a
more legible way.
This is a dotted quarter at the end of a bar when Syncopation is Off…
…and when it is On.
Shuffle Activate this function when you have played a shuffle beat and want it
displayed as straight notes (not triplets). This is very common in jazz
notation.