![]() ![]() ![]() While a few elements are still being implemented, the overall chapter structure has now been established, including section sub-headings on most pages to help contributors organise the necessary content in a logical and easy-to-understand way. Marc Sabatella, Peter Jonas and I have been working for several months to prepare a new version of the online handbook that’s both comprehensive and user-friendly. It poses no problem whatsoever to a user with a musescore "background".As we prepare for the release of MuseScore 4, we’d like to invite our community to participate in generating the documentation that will form our online handbook, available here on. "properties" is just an updated and significantly improved inspector (who came up with that name?). Most of the functionality is easy to understand for someone coming from earlier versions of musescore. I that still an option for now?īTW The problem with the handbook is that the sections still missing are the difficult ones. This worked well for MS2 (as well as possible with the available sounds anyway). I used to place markings to adjust the sound (and make those markings invisible that a human player would not require). On the upside one can now voice a chord in a piano part (making a line stand out that is "hidden" in the middle of a chord as a live pianist would). Now, it seems, I have to change the velocity of every note along a crescendo line separately. ![]() In MS3 you could modify the velocity (or its pace of change) for a whole group of notes. I am not sure that this is an improvement over MS3 from a user's perspective. I have indeed not yet found out (and I presume SoundMountain hasn't either, hence his question for help) where I can "change" the properties of that individual dynamic in a score to a higher or lower number, as I do in MS3. In MS4 I can only "place" a dynamic (or a hairpin for that matter) (and position it above or below the staff, even flip it), which indeed affects the velocity, but with a certain standard number. Placement: Position on score, above or below staff. Use a higher number to make notes sound louder, use lower number to make notes sound softer. The following is a list of properties in the Dynamic section of the Inspector: Am I overlooking something that actually works already in MS4, despite not yet being descripted? ![]()
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