One note with two stems (up and down) - how?
Hello all,
how do I get a note head with two stems, one up and one down? Please view the attached example with a half note in the bass being shard as the first of six eights in the melody line.
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Comments
See: https://musescore.org/en/handbook/voices
ie: eighth notes (stems up) in Voice1
And the dotted half note (tied with a quarter note) in Voice 2
EDIT: By steps in a sample file: steps1.mscz
For the E shared notehead (step #3), select the shortest E (eighth note) and press"V", or better, change the notehead type in Inspector (so, for half note)
Probably I was unclear: I don't want to detach the dotted half note visible in the screen shot into a separate (second) voice. Instead I have two separate voices and want to merge the dotted half note head with the first eights note head, yielding two stems (up and down) like in the attached example.
I found the following suggestion meanwhile:
https://musescore.org/en/handbook/noteheads-0#examples-notehead-sharing
Searching the forum a lot before, I could not find this helpful suggestion because I had no idea having to search vor "notehead sharing".
Thanks anyway!
In reply to Probably I was unclear: I… by EsDur
"want to merge the dotted half note head with the first eights note head"
Have you read the end of previous message?
Ie: "For the E shared notehead (step #3), select the shortest E (eighth note) and press"V", or better, change the notehead type in Inspector (so, for half note)"
In reply to "want to merge the dotted… by cadiz1
My 2nd message end your "edit" overlapped. The suggestion in your "edit" is very convenient and fast - much appreciated!
Edit: I stay with the very fast "v" method for now.
In reply to My 2nd message end your … by EsDur
In handbook, it's explained here: https://musescore.org/en/handbook/noteheads-0#change-offset-to-shared
In reply to In handbook, it's explained… by cadiz1
Nice - same content but differently labeled / tagged to what I found further up this thread. Answers to common questions are almost always there. The art is to discover which key words bring them up front.