User manual

Table Of Contents
NOTE
You can dene MIDI pitches for playing techniques on the Note Input and Editing page
in Preferences.
5. Input notes in one of the following ways:
Five-line staff presentation type: Press letters on a computer keyboard or play notes on a
MIDI keyboard, corresponding to staff positions for the clef set in
Preferences. For
example, press B to input notes for the instrument assigned to the middle line of a ve-
line staff when Treble G clef is set.
Grid and single-line instruments presentation types: Press the letter of any note name A
to G on a computer keyboard or play any note on a MIDI keyboard to input notes for
the instrument on whose line the caret is currently positioned.
NOTE
Notes played on MIDI keyboards are interpreted differently, depending on whether Use
percussion map or Use staff position is set for the different kit presentation types in
the
Note Input section of the Note Input and Editing page in Preferences.
Any kit presentation type: Press Y to input notes for the instrument and playing
technique shown above the rhythmic grid.
Any kit presentation type: Click on the staff where you want to input notes, and at the
rhythmic positions where you want them.
6. Press Esc or Return to stop note input.
RELATED LINKS
Caret on page 159
Percussion kits and drum sets on page 869
Note input setup for percussion kits on page 177
Percussion Instrument Playing Techniques dialog on page 876
Changing the playing techniques of notes on percussion kit staves on page 870
Preferences dialog on page 58
Note input setup for percussion kits
Inputting music for unpitched percussion instruments works differently than for pitched
instruments. You can use any of the usual methods for unpitched percussion input, but using a
MIDI keyboard or a computer keyboard is most
ecient.
You can nd options relating to note input for percussion in the Note Input section of the
Note Input and Editing page in Preferences.
There is one set of options for input onto ve-line staves, and another set of options for input
onto grids and individual instruments.
The main choice affects input via MIDI keyboards and computer keyboards.
Use percussion map
A percussion map denes which MIDI notes produce which sound for a particular
patch in a sound library. For example, in General MIDI percussion, C2 (note 36)
produces bass drum, and D2 (note 38) produces snare drum, and so on.
If you know a particular mapping well, you may nd it helpful to use the mapping
directly for input.
Write mode
Note input
177
Dorico SE 3.1.10