On Sat, Feb 17, 2007 at 22:23:48 +1300, Chris Bannister wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 15, 2007 at 09:53:41AM -0500, Kamaraju S Kusumanchi wrote:
> > Kent West wrote:
> >
> > > (Off-Topic because this is really a LaTeX question rather than a Debian
> > > question.)
> > >
> >
> > Not an offtopic question.
Chris Bannister wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 15, 2007 at 09:53:41AM -0500, Kamaraju S Kusumanchi wrote:
>
>> Kent West wrote:
>>
>>> (Off-Topic because this is really a LaTeX question rather than a Debian
>>> question.)
>>>
>> Not an offtopic question. You are using Debian, so this is releva
On Thu, Feb 15, 2007 at 09:53:41AM -0500, Kamaraju S Kusumanchi wrote:
> Kent West wrote:
>
> > (Off-Topic because this is really a LaTeX question rather than a Debian
> > question.)
> >
>
> Not an offtopic question. You are using Debian, so this is relevant IMHO.
Great, I have a bad case of fl
Kent West:
>
> Looks promising, but the learning curve appears to be a right-angle.
> From page 2 of the manual:
>> If you are not familiar with TEX at all
>> I would recommend to find another software
>> package to do musical typesetting.
>> Setting up TEX and MusiXTEX
>> on your machine and mast
Hi, havnt been following this thread, just jumping in.
This link has some samples of musixtex that you could perhaps use to
get yourself familiar with it.
Else use something like noteedit to edit your music and if you want,
then you can export your music to musixtex.
HTH
Oli
Þann 2007-02-15, 18:
Manoj Srivastava wrote:
On Wed, 14 Feb 2007 22:12:55 -0600, Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
The material looks like standard guitar tabs you'd find on the web,
like this, from http://www.guitaretab.com/a/adam-sandler/211.html:
Package: musixtex
Description: Typeset music scores wit
Kent West wrote:
(Off-Topic because this is really a LaTeX question rather than a Debian
question.)
I've been using OpenOffice.org to produce paper copies of songs written
for guitar, but with all the talk about LaTeX on this list lately, I got
to wondering if it might be a better product.
Hi,
On Wed, 14 Feb 2007 22:12:55 -0600, Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> (Off-Topic because this is really a LaTeX question rather than a
> Debian question.)
> I've been using OpenOffice.org to produce paper copies of songs
> written for guitar, but with all the talk about LaTeX on this lis
Kent West wrote:
> (Off-Topic because this is really a LaTeX question rather than a Debian
> question.)
>
Not an offtopic question. You are using Debian, so this is relevant IMHO.
> I've been using OpenOffice.org to produce paper copies of songs written
> for guitar, but with all the talk about
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
> Kent West wrote:
>
>> What I'm concerned about is the chord names (A, D, etc) need to line up
>> with the word where the chords change, which means exact placement will
>> be necessary.
>
> <---LaTeX-File--->
> \documentclass[a4paper,10pt]{article}
>
> \newlength{\ch
Kent West wrote:
> (Off-Topic because this is really a LaTeX question rather than a Debian
> question.)
>
> Verse 1
> A
> I wanna make you smile
> Bm
> Whenever you're sad
> C#m
> Carry you around
> D
> When your arthritis is bad
> A E
> All I wanna do is
>
Kent West:
>
> What I'm concerned about is the chord names (A, D, etc) need to line up
> with the word where the chords change, which means exact placement will
> be necessary. I currently do this in OO.o with a monospace font and
> manually spacing over to where the chord name goes.
I am sure th
(Off-Topic because this is really a LaTeX question rather than a Debian
question.)
I've been using OpenOffice.org to produce paper copies of songs written
for guitar, but with all the talk about LaTeX on this list lately, I got
to wondering if it might be a better product.
The material looks like
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