Re: Special Ending Pattern
Reply #3 –
I am trying to transcribe something but use familiar endings, barlines, and flow directions. It has
... Ending 1,3 .. Master Repeat close, Ending 2 ... "To next strain", double bar, Ending 4 .... Fine, DoubleBar close .... D.C. al Fine
where the ... represent regular measures. My guess is Ending 2 flows to the passage after Fine, then back to the top and, following the repeat sign, Ending 4 is the "coda".
I see layouts like this A LOT in the music we play at church...
Flow is:
Beginning to SE1, repeat and flow into SE2, then the section AFTER SE4 and to the DC which takes you back to the top, through SE3, follow the repeat back to where it starts thence go to SE4 and finish at the Fine.
NWC will not flow correctly on playback if you enter it this way. The closest you can get is to make the SE1,3 into an SE1,D but be aware that the repeat in SE3 will not happen. Then make SE4 a Coda... It really won't work very well - you nearly have to write it out straight... There may be other ways around it by playing with where a Coda appears, but it won't be very satisfying.
If you don't need the playback to work correctly but do need the appearance to match, then enter as written but be aware that playback will be wrong.
I've asked for better flow control, err, control, in the past but to date there seem to have been more pressing priorities...
We need to be able to override the lack of repeats after a DS or DC without resorting to a Coda to reset the repeat functionality.
Also, in my humble opinion, DC, and DC al Fine; and DC and DC al Coda should behave differently, they do not. Similarly, DS and DS al Fine; and DS and DS al Coda should also behave differently, again, they do not. A DC should be just that. A DS should be just that. To Coda and Fine directives should be ignored unless they are referred to by the DS or DC explicitly.
Another useful flow control object would be a Codetta and appropriate related directives, though this is considerably less of a problem.
These flow issues cause me no end of trouble when I'm transcribing things...