NoteWorthy Composer Forum

Forums => General Discussion => Topic started by: FrankSit on 2023-11-23 02:28 am

Title: single note on the songbook
Post by: FrankSit on 2023-11-23 02:28 am
Hello, howis t can I split using the User toil for single note used by 2 staves. What I did is to edit to be as the song book.

See attached, how to split it without manulally edit

Thank you,

Frank
Title: Re: single note on the songbook
Post by: Warren Porter on 2023-11-23 05:01 am

HTH
Pacem

Edited: I may have misread your question. Were those layered staves with both singing the 2nd half note?
Title: Re: single note on the songbook
Post by: FrankSit on 2023-11-23 05:34 am
I may have misread your question. Were those layered staves with both singing the 2nd half note?
Yes you misread my question. You know from the songbook made by NWC. I want to split the 1st couple staves by In 'Tools/User Tools.../.Starter Tools' you'll find the tool 'parts(adp)'. Before you use that you'll have to duplicate the staves in your file, so have 2 times 2 identical staves.

but I have problem with the one like on the picture while slurred and there is a singgle note to be used by 2 staves. My question is there anyway not to reedit it, but everything done by user tools?

Thank you,
Title: Re: single note on the songbook
Post by: Flurmy on 2023-11-23 09:33 am
I don't fully understood your question but I try to answer.
You should be able to do what you want manually. See the attached file.
Regarding the user tool "Parts", sorry but I never used it.
Title: Re: single note on the songbook
Post by: FrankSit on 2023-11-23 02:38 pm
You should be able to do what you want manually. See the attached file.
Yes, I am able to do it manually, just in case there is an automatic one in the user tools that can handle for some particural chord, coz if we follow the result when we put the lyrics it does not fit.
The reason that I split the song book staves is because I want to put the number note, coz in Indonesia, we prefer the number note to practice in our church choir when learning a song.

Thank you,

Frank