A way to show the current position…
Sometimes, it's hard to find out where something changed, e.g. if the layout changes, or (virtually always) when undoing or redoing things.
It would be nice if, in such cases, the new cursor position / the position in which something was last undone/redone would be made visible, or at least, there would be a way to do it (key?).
This is especially as I often don't know what was/would be undone/redone, as MuseScore does not show that in the menu (like some other programs, I think Inkscape does) and sometimes undo if I don't know if I did something or hit the wrong key or did something else wrong entirely.
Comments
I have run into this often. In other (not music notation) programs, if you scroll your cursor off the screen and make an entry, the screen puts itself back on the current location, not true in MS. The last note entered is still selected, so theoretically pressing the up then down button should leave the note unchanged and return your current location back to the screen.
It does return the screen to the cursor if you enter a note, which can usually be undone with ctrl-z.
In reply to I have run into this often. by mike320
Right, I experience this all the time too. Yes, you can see the current position in the status bar, but it would be really nice if, for example, the current position was shown with a yellow highlight background that spans the whole height of the measure to make it very obvious where it is. If you scroll to another page to check something or if you start and stop playback, right now the only visual indication you have of the current location is a small blue note/rest/whatever. When you are looking at a whole page of notes that is really hard to spot.
In reply to Right, I experience this all… by music_by_jeff
I strongly support this. :)
I don't really understand the question. I also don't seem to have such a problem with MS. Can you give examples? Which way do you enter your score?
In reply to I don't really understand the by azumbrunn
You can use any score you like that is long enough to use the mouse wheel to scroll the current cursor location off of the screen. In the hypothetical (actually happened to me many times) situation where you are looking at another part or parts for what ever reason. You forget where you were at entering a note. If you clicked on the page somewhere to deselect the current note, you have no way of automatically returning to that spot. If you use the undo/redo method, the status at the bottom will show you what is selected after the undo, but you then have to move to that measure some other way. MS does not move the screen to show what was undone. Basically there is no automatic way to return to the last spot you were editing.
I enter all my scores in continuous view using the computer keyboard.
In reply to You can use any score you by mike320
Oh, one can scroll with a mouse wheel? Then I probably need to set up mouse wheel emulation for my laptop… (it’s been ages since I last used an actual mouse… probably when I last played a game other than text, DOS or emulator based)
In reply to Oh, one can scroll with a by mirabilos
If it has a touchpad and was made this century, then probably two finger swipe is already set up for this. Otherwise you might need to go into some settings somewhere. But yeah, scroll wheel is absolutely essential to efficient use of MuseScore.
In reply to If it has a touchpad and was by Marc Sabatella
Of course it has no touchpad (*not* having one, and only having an IBM nipple, is one of the acceptance criteria for laptops) but I can probably map something.
In reply to Oh, one can scroll with a by mirabilos
TIL: X11 mouse wheel emulation (X.org method only works with mouse buttons, which is a no-go):
Then use 🔈▾ and 🔈▴ keys (which somehow don’t do anything for me anyway) to scroll.
To figure out which key to use, use
xbindkeys -k
then press the key, it will tell you.The cursor position is shown in the bottom right corner.
In reply to The cursor position is shown by xavierjazz
A "jump to" feature would be a good addition to the marker.
In reply to A "jump to" feature would be by xavierjazz
Try Ctrl+F and you have a jump to, see https://musescore.org/en/node/38436/revisions/255141/view#find