Ruler And Snap Function
Is there ruler (Vertical and Horizontal) or snap function?
I know there are Threads about this previously. Is it now available with the version 2.0 or 3.0?
Sometimes I need to take notes which is independent of Staff.
I want the notes become consistent in different musescore files.
Comments
There is no such feature exactly, but lots of ways to control layout. It's not totally clear what you are trying to do, can you attach a sample score and describe in more detail?
In reply to There is no such feature… by Marc Sabatella
I was going to comment, but I really don't have a clue what snap to grid horizontal/vertical in the inspector is supposed to do.
In reply to I was going to comment, but… by mike320
It's kind of hard to explain, but it basically makes dragging work in a similar way to how using the cursor up/down keys work in the Inspector spin box - moving by specific "chunks" rather than in smooth increments. So for instance, if you select an element, click within one of the offset fields in the Inspector, and hit Up, the element moves exactly 0.5 sp. If you use the snap to grid function, then dragging will also be constrained to exactly 0.5 sp increments, except it also rounds to the nearest 0.5 sp, to aid with alignment. So, if the original offset was -2.17 sp, then hitting the Up key changes this to -2.76, then -3.17, etc, but dragging up will change it to -2.50, then -3, etc.
In reply to There is no such feature… by Marc Sabatella
You see there is a text;
"+ Verse 2 = Verse 1"
When I write and drag it under a staff I always want it is placed a particular distance away from the left side of the sheet and from the staff automatically. (Snap Function would have done that)
At least I want to know how much it's away from those places. (Ruler would have done that.)
In reply to You see there is a text; "+… by zanshin777
If I understand correctly, you don't need a snap function for this, you simply need to attach the text directly to the staff, rather than attach it to the frame then manually adjust it. That is, use Staff Text, not frame text. You can then set the text style however you like in terms of font etc, and press "X" to flip it below the staff. All will work perfectly with no need for manual adjustments and no need for a grid.
Attaching to the frame would be a way to get it at the same physical position on the page regardless of the position of the staff, and that works perfectly well for that purpose without a grid - indeed I can't see how a grid would make that work any better. If you want it the place relative to the staff, then attach it to the staff.
In reply to If I understand correctly,… by Marc Sabatella
Then now since I use Staff Text for two different purposes It won't work.
Because the text I write on the staff and the one below the staff will have different specs.
A friend from reddit suggested backround papers with grid. It's better than none.
https://musescore.org/en/node/28576
Thank you very much for the answers.
In reply to Then now since I use Staff… by zanshin777
Sure it works, you can just use the Inspector to assign a different style to that particular text. it's quite simple and works extremely work, far better than any attempt to manual adjust things to a grid. Manual adjustment is absolutely not needed or efficient here - if you want consistency, this is what styles are for.
In reply to Sure it works, you can just… by Marc Sabatella
But I use Staff text for two different purposes IN THE SAME SHEET.
As far as I know you can use only a single style for a sheet.
In reply to But I use Staff text for two… by zanshin777
You can set up a custom style in Format->Style->Text styles and apply it to the proper texts (one or several at a time) using the inspector and selecting the proper style from the dropdown list.
In reply to But I use Staff text for two… by zanshin777
Exactly. So:
1) add staff text
2) use Inspector to set it to one of the User styles
3) customize the settings in the Inspector so it is precisely how and where you want it
4) press the "Save as Style" button next to any setting you customize
5) save the result to your Templates folder
Now every time you create a score using that template, you can add this text by adding staff text, setting it to that user style, and it's perfect with no manual adjustment, no fiddling with rulers, etc.
In reply to Exactly. So: 1) add staff… by Marc Sabatella
Thank you very much for the answer Marc Sabatella.