User manual

Table Of Contents
whereas accents appear at the start. You can change the positions of articulations relative to
individual tie chains.
RELATED LINKS
Note and rest grouping on page 524
Beam grouping according to meters on page 510
Inputting notes on page 164
Forcing the duration of notes/rests on page 169
Inputting ties on page 183
Splitting tie chains on page 837
Time signatures on page 841
Input methods for time signatures on page 210
Notes on page 631
Positions of articulations on page 486
Changing the positions of articulations on tie chains on page 488
Bracketed noteheads on page 640
Tablature on page 809
Caret on page 159
Moving the caret manually on page 163
General placement conventions for ties
Ties join two noteheads together, meaning the ends of ties are positioned close to the noteheads
to which they are attached.
Ties are curved lines, and the direction of the curve usually follows the stem direction of the
notes. If notes are stem-up, ties curve downwards, and if notes are stem-down, ties curve
upwards.
NOTE
If there are multiple voices on the staff, all ties in up-stem voices curve upwards and all ties in
down-stem voices curve downwards.
There are two main conventions for the placement of the ends of ties relative to noteheads. One
convention is to place the ends of ties outside noteheads, meaning above or below them, ideally
positioned at the horizontal center of noteheads. The other convention is to place the ends of
ties between noteheads, ideally positioned at the vertical center of noteheads.
A tie outside noteheads A tie between noteheads
For both conventions, Dorico Elements automatically positions the ends of ties as close as
possible to the notes that they join while avoiding collisions with other notations.
The vertical placement of ties is also automatically adjusted in Dorico Elements so that neither of
the end points of ties, nor the apex of tie curves, starts or ends on a staff line. If this happens, it
can cause the shape of ties to appear distorted, which makes the music harder to read.
Ties
General placement conventions for ties
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Dorico Elements 3.1.10