Selection filter and unisons
When I have two coincident notes on the same staff, i.e., in two voices, it seems impossible to click on one of them (but not the other); the selection filter seems to have no effect. This is fairly important, for I might want to move the inaccessible note not to be a unison, or silence it for the unison clipping bug. Is there a way?
Comments
If you press alt+up arrow it will move to the next lower numbered voice (such as from 2 to 1). Pressing alt+down arrow will move to the next higher numbered voice (such as from 1 to 2). If you have the wrong voice selected, up will move up a staff, down will move down a staff.
In reply to If you press alt+up arrow it… by mike320
My heaven; isn't science wonderful!?! I never knew that! Thanks!
In reply to My heaven; isn't science… by [DELETED] 1831606
The developers thought of a lot of neat tricks.
In reply to The developers thought of a… by mike320
They shouldn't be “tricks”. The fact that in 3 years of using this application intensely I hadn't discovered or read about it is a problem in itself. It shouldn't be a matter of serendipity.
In reply to They shouldn't be “tricks”. … by [DELETED] 1831606
My use of the word "trick" was an attempt to be cute. This "trick" is actually explained in the accessibility section (for the visually impaired). I could have explained at least 3 other ways to get to the note you want, but I chose to give one way, which is the easiest.
In reply to The developers thought of a… by mike320
My method was until now to select the chord via shift and deselect voice 1 in the selection filter to edit the unisono note in voice 2. But your recommendation is quite simpler, thank's mike320.
In reply to If you press alt+up arrow it… by mike320
Alt+Up/Down is clever indeed, even though I think I either wrote or reviewed some of that code (?!) I wouldn't have thought of using it for this particular purpose :-) I normally use other tricks, like first moving the other voice temporarily out of the way via Ctrl+Up/Down, or first selecting the next or previous note in the desired voice and then cursor over the note I really mean.