User manual

Table Of Contents
776
Staff settings
Display Transpose
No Overlap
When notes starting at the same position have different lengths, the program tends to
add more ties than you may want. This can be avoided by using No Overlap.
This recording in the Key Editor…
…is displayed like this when No Overlap is deactivated…
…and like this when No Overlap is activated.
You can insert “exceptions” to the No Overlap setting on the Staff page of the Score
Settings dialog, by using the Display Quantize tool.
Shuffle
In jazz it is very common to score a shuffled beat as straight notes, simply to make it
more legible.
When the Shuffle flag is activated, the program searches for eighth note or sixteenth
note pairs where the second note is played late (with a “swing feel” or as the third
note in a triplet). Such pairs are displayed as regular eighth or sixteenth notes instead
of triplet-based figures.
Without and with Shuffle
Display Transpose
This is used when preparing parts for instruments that are not scored at the actual
concert key. For example, if you want the note C3 to be played by an alto sax, you
have to score it as an A3 – nine semitones up. Luckily, the Display Transpose setting
takes care of this for you:
Use the pop-up menu to select the instrument for which you are scoring.
If the pop-up menu does not list your instrument, you can set the desired
transposition with the Semitones value field.
Ö The Display Transpose setting does not affect playback or the actual pitch of the
notes – it only changes how they are displayed and printed.
You can also insert Display Transpose changes anywhere in the score, by inserting a
key change symbol and using the Transpose setting in the Edit Key/Clef dialog (see
“Display Transpose in the Edit Key dialog” on page 744).
In the Score Settings dialog, on the Project page (“Chord Symbols” subpage),
deactivate the “Use Display Transpose” option if you do not want the chord
symbols to be affected by the Display Transpose setting (see
“Chord Symbols” on
page 844).
!
Please note that there may be situations when neither of these alternatives is ideal. If
you run into such a situation, it can probably be resolved by using polyphonic voices,
see
“Polyphonic voicing” on page 779.