MS4 wrong notation (stem misalignment) of two voices in harmonic seconds when the upper voice is dotted

• Aug 15, 2024 - 20:57

MU3 got this right, MU4 gets it wrong. The stems should be aligned, meaning the upper note needs to be on the left, the lower note on the right. Yes, the dot on the upper note means that sometimes the lower voice gets pushed to the right, especially as in this example when the dot is placed in the center of the same space on which the upper note is placed. But the upper note should absolutely NOT be positioned to the right of the lower note. That notation is simply wrong. It looks horrid and makes scores from MS4 unpublishable. In the forum this same problem shows up in many other posts, but nobody seems to have reported it for the glaring notation mistake that it is. Please fix it. Thanks!

MuseScore 4: WRONG
MS4.png

MuseScore 3: CORRECT
MS3.png


Comments

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

Thank you for the reply and directions. I was not aware that bugs need to be reported on GitHub. To do that one needs a GuitHub account. Please excuse my ignorance, but why then does this forum exist? It would appear that reporting a bug here is now a useless exercise, or?

Everyone has their own opinion. I'm sure someone will come along and tell us what Gould says. Attached is the default layout of three mostly random voices in MU4. It put the dotted note after the first 1/8 th note in voice 2 right from the start.
Then I tried the same thing in MU3. After the first two voices were entered, the dotted note was first. Just Like the OP wants. But as soon as I added the third voice (the lower notes) the dotted note jumped to the right of the 1/8 th note ( just like MU4) and made a big gap after itself.
dot.png

In reply to by bobjp

No. That's a different situation, where a lower voice crosses above an upper voice.

And no, this is definitely not a matter of opinion. MU4 is flat out wrong here. Absolutely no publisher shoves the upper voice to the right. It's wrong. The stems need to align, as stated above.

In reply to by neo-barock

So you didn't read my post. The dotted note is voice one. The run of 1/8th notes is voice two. When I first entered them in MU3, all was as you want. When I entered the first lower note, The dotted note jumped to the right. The lower note stem was originally stem down. My example is sloppy to be sure. My point is that MU3 ends up doing the same thig MU4 does. What do publishers say about this three voice situation? Go ahead try it yourself

In reply to by neo-barock

"support and bug report" can be confusing. But this is a community forum. I rarely see musescore staff here. Anyone who responds to you is a volunteer who is not paid for it.
They may or may not create an issue for you. It is their choice, but not their obligation.
However, people here are very responsive and always happy to help, which is very good for software you do not pay money for.
Personally, I create issues for others if I am personally interested in them, for example in case of a crash or corrupted score, but this is not your case.

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

All those examples confirm what I'm saying, except this one:

Screenshot 2024-08-16 at 11.46.47.png

No serious publisher uses that except as a last resort in a worst case scenario. Look at all the examples and look at any random sampling of published music, and you will see that the rule is to align the stems. Shoving the dotted note to the right does not save space as you claim in your first reply. It does exactly the opposite. You should also look at Gould's admonitions about aligning stems.

In reply to by Jojo-Schmitz

The absurdity of this shove the dotted note to the right nonsense is most clearly shown in examples where the lower voice continues, as shown below. Mu3 does bizarre incorrect spacing by default.

MU3 default: CORRECT but with wrong spacing
Mu3.png

That can be corrected using chord position left on the lower note, then Leading Space left on the next 16th note.

MU3 spacing corrected: CORRECT
Mu3 corrected.png

Compare that to the notation of Mu4.

Mu4: WRONG
Mu4.png

In contrapuntal music, exactly this situation can appear many times in a single piece of music. Mu4 is obviously wrong here and it needs to be corrected.

In reply to by neo-barock

I only have questions about what you say about publishers because you haven't backed it up with information from a publisher. You say that you haven't seen examples of the doted note on the "wrong" side. Therefore, you say publishers won't except dotted notes on the "wrong" side. Have you had a score rejected for this reason? Or know someone who has had that happen? Publishers tend to use their own typesetters. What if a well known composer wanted their notation a certain way. Let's say they had a good reason for putting the dotted note on the "wrong" side. Do you really think a publisher is going to refuse that score? None of us are "well known", but I think you get my point.
As for Gould. She is a record of the current state of notation. Notation that has always been, and always will be, in flux. Notation that differs from country to country. So much so that we can't even agree what to call a quarter note.

In reply to by bobjp

" So much so that we can't even agree what to call a quarter note."

It's not a crisis that some of us call a quarter note a crotchet, noire or Viertelnote.
But with luck we should agree on the notation we see on the page and how it sounds? Music is a universal language.
;-)

In reply to by bobjp

Look, you'll find at least 20 examples of this in Bach's 15 Sinfonias:

Sinfonia 2, bar 27
Sinfonia 4, bar 4
Sinfonia 6, bars 4, 26
Sinfonia 7, bar 23
Sinfonia 8, bars 5, 23
Sinfonia 11, bars 3, 4, 6, 7, 31, 32, 67, 68, 70
Sinfonia 12, bar 5
Sinfonia 13, bars 17, 28
Sinfonia 14, bar 17

This music has obviously been printed by many different publishers. So check them. You'll see how it's done. Bach's music is the gold standard, and Mu4 consistently ruins the notation in every case.

In reply to by neo-barock

That list tells us that Publishers are printing the music the way Bach wrote it. Looking at original manuscripts tells us so. But that is all it tells us. Again, they are printing it the way he wrote it. That doesn't mean that they won't accept something written differently.

In reply to by bobjp

That is utter nonsense.

Check the Art of Fugue keyboard edition from any publisher. Bach wrote it in open score notation, one part per staff. How do the publishers handle all these same situations in that work when they put all the lines together of a grand staff? Exactly the same way. Because that is how it's done. Case closed!

Reading the comments here it seems that Musescore could benefit from a functionality to reorder voices (maybe like the "accidental column" controls getting added in 4.4). With notation what is clearest is correct and there are definitely situations where the notehead on the right is clearest, as Gould mentions. Adding voice offset functionality would solve all of this.

In reply to by vallieplushie

I'll jump in here, and add my own opinion: It doesn't matter what Gould says, or what publishers may or may not do, or how MuseScore or Finale or Dorico do it. What's important is what is going to be the most clear to the performer. Just try to be consistent, and know when to break the rules.

In reply to by neo-barock

But why keep posting on this forum? It's becoming pointless, and it's no longer the best place. If you want to get things moving, do it on Github (here: https://github.com/musescore/MuseScore/issues) where the developer (ie @oktophonie) who implemented this new default can at least make his point.

NB: Opening an account on Github is trivial (you're asked for an e-mail address, a password, and that's it).

In reply to by cadiz1

Well sorry, I've continued to post here in order to respond to others who keep posting here, but yes it is quite tedious, so I'll be happy to stop. As I said, I'll post it on GitHub, but honestly, why doesn't @oktophonie just look at this post? I mean, he does presumably have internet access, right? It's all rather annoying.

In reply to by cadiz1

Actually it has become a user only forum once MuseScore 4 team started to use github and decided to stay there and makes this one a user only one.
It used to be the correct place to report bugs.
The current procedure discussing potential bugs here between users and only reporting what seems true bugs on github has its merits, but might seem dubble work to new users. And confusing when super users such as Marc or Jojo answer as they are so knowledgeable that they look like they are MuseScore official team.
@cadiz and of course I know you know all this, that was to offer more context to whoever might need it.

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