Re: two notes at once...how do I....
Reply #9 –
G'day Edouard,
there are a couple of concepts that you might benefit from if we cover them first.
1) Like notes, rests can have a stem direction. This can be done after the note or rest is placed by highlighting it and pressing <shift-up> for stem up or <shift-dn> for stem down. You can of course use the mouse instead by going to the note/rest's properties or to the toolbar (black notehead with red stem with arrowhead - one up and one down).
It can also be done by setting the stem direction prior to placing the note or rest - just press the key combination or the requirted toolbar button.
2) NWC can "layer" staves. This means that you can write multiple staves independantly, set the "layer with next staff" option in the staff properties and then enable layering in |file|page setup|contents| or the |view| menu.
The 2 (or more) staves will then be superimposed. This is a very good technique when simple chording does not quite give you what you want.
In the event that you get noteheads overlapping, you can also add extra note spacing (property of the note).
3) Pretty much any object on the staff can be positioned vertically by highlighting (selecting) the object and pressing <shift-up> or <shift-dn>. This is very important when locating rests if you need to layer staves.
Examples of objects that cannot be vertically positioned in this way are: time signatures, key signatures, clefs and barlines. There are probably others but these are the ones I can think of just now.
For your first circled part:
Set stem direction down, set duration, press <space> to place the rest, set stem direction up for the note, arrow to the D line, set duration and press <ctrl-enter> to place the note.
For the second circled part:
Set stem direction down, set duration for the first "C", arrow to the "C" space and press <enter>, set duration to 4th and press <enter>, set stem direction up, set duration to 8th, arrow to the "D" line and press <ctrl-Enter>, arrow to the "E" space, press </> to set a tied note (you could click the toolbar button instead) and press <enter>.
The third circle is probably some kind of artifact, I cannot see any reason for such a thickening or extra line.
The Fourth circle is similar to the first:
Set duration to 8th, set stem direction down, press <space>, srrow to the "C" space, press <enter>, arrow to "E", <enter>, set flat attribute (toolbar buttion or press <8>), <enter>. Now move the cursor back to be immediately to the right of the space but still on the "E" space, set stem direction to up and duration to 4th and press <ctrl-enter>, move the cursor to be immediately to the right of the 8th "E" but on the "A" line and press <ctrl-enter>... voila.
Lawrie