User manual

Table Of Contents
835
Working with symbols
Symbol details
In the Score Settings dialog (Project page–Notation Style subpage) you can
specify globally how tuplets are displayed.
You can also select a font and size for the tuplet numbers in the Font Settings
subpage.
You can also right-click on the tuplet group symbol and select the “Extend (+)” or
“Reduce (-)” command to extend it to the next chord or to reduce it.
Vertical symbols
The vertical symbols in the Line/Trill tab are “note-dependent”. This means that they
must be inserted in front of a note. For more information see
“Note layer symbols” on
page 811 and the text about grace notes (which behave similarly) in the section
“Grace notes” on page 807.
The Other tab
Lyrics and text symbols are described in the chapter Working with text on page 845.
Chord symbols are described in the section “Inserting chord symbols” on page 841.
Pedal down and up symbols
When you insert a Pedal down or up symbol, you also insert an actual MIDI event
(damper pedal, control change 64) at that position. Similarly, inserting or recording a
damper pedal event in another editor displays a pedal down/up symbol in the score.
If the “Hide Pedal Markers” option is activated in the Score Settings dialog,
Project–Notation Style subpage (Miscellaneous category), all pedal markers are
hidden.
Use this if you have recorded a lot of damper pedal messages, but do not want
these to show in the score (for example if you are writing for an instrument other
than piano).
A pedal down/up symbol combination can be displayed as “Two Symbols”, ““Ped.” +
Bracket” or as “Bracket only”. Just right-click on the pedal symbol and choose an
option from the context menu. You can also set this in the Score Settings dialog, on
the Project–Notation Style subpage (Miscellaneous category).
Repeats
Repeat signs (one and two bars) have a special feature: if you hold down [Shift]-
[Ctrl]/[Command] when entering them, notes in the bars they relate to are
automatically hidden (for more info on hiding symbols, see
“Hiding/showing objects”
on page 868).