Re: labeling "right hand" and "left hand" simply as "piano"
Reply #5 –
G'day Andrew,
I understand about being new...
The font thingy isn't as hard as it seems... If you look at |File|Page Setup| you get a dialogue box with tabs. Select the "Fonts" tab and you have access to change the fonts used by different parts of the program.
E.G. Staff Lyric is the font used when you write lyrics.
There is a full list in the help...
Now, you can set these fonts to anything that is installed in your system. Suppose you don't like the Times New Roman default. Thats fine, you can simply change any or all of 'em to, say Arial, AND they don't all have to be the same...
My suggestion to you was to simply select one of the fonts and change it to one of my supplied ones. Of course, you need to download, unzip and install 'em first.
Once installed, you could change, say User1, to MusikTextSerif - this being close enough to Times New Roman for your purposes.
Then you place a text entry - you already know how - and select the characters I've already suggested. The easy way to do this is download and install Typecase as suggested in the doco in the font suites, but you can always use the extended ASCII codes as well.
So, the <Alt-0210> (Press and hold the <Alt> key while typing in <0210> on the numeric keypad -when you release the <Alt> key, the character designated by the code will appear) is a dashed line that will overlap without (I hope - that's how I designed it anyhow) becoming a solid line. <Alt-0212> will give you the downward "hook" at the right end.
The <Alt-0160> character mentioned for staff labels is simply a "no break space". This is effectively an empty character... It allows you to use up horizontal space without having to place printable characters. You need a different number of 'em for each staff or NWC will complain that 2 staves have the same name.
This will take up the horizontal space you need so that there is room for a printed, text label that you can position using the normal insert text dialogue.
As for the bolded lines etc. in PDF's and print preview - that could be your printer driver. What kind of printer do you have? What resolution is the driver set to? How are you producing the PDF's in the first place?
NWC2 is a worthwhile upgrade. It is still currently in beta so you have to sign up as a beta tester to gain access, but it behaves very well. If you check out the NWC2 discussions, you will see that some of 'em get quite "techo", but you can also see the advances that have been made as well as the requests for improvement that often come out.