Ok, it seems that i didn't ask the right question... How do i make the less number of bars on one row? You see, i want to make 65 bars on 4 pages. How can i do that?
First, though, you should actually enter your music. If you are looking at a blank page - well, measures with only a full measure rest - then of course many of them will fit per line. MuseScore automatically determines how many measures to put on a line based on standard engraving principles. As you add notes to your score, the measures automatically get wider and there will autoamtically be fewer of them per line. So don't worry about fine tuning which measures are on which lines until you are done entering notes and can see for yourself if you need more or fewer measures per line - or, as is normally the case, if the default alyout ends up being just fine as is.
Comments
Add bars (Alt+Shift+B) musescore will go to the new page automatically.
See also: https://musescore.org/en/handbook/breaks-and-spacers
In reply to Add bars (Alt+Shift+B) by Shoichi
Ok, it seems that i didn't ask the right question... How do i make the less number of bars on one row? You see, i want to make 65 bars on 4 pages. How can i do that?
In reply to Ok, it seems that i didn't by Mihailo Krivokuca
And the answer is the same... https://musescore.org/en/handbook/breaks-and-spacers
And also https://musescore.org/en/handbook/tools#line-breaks
In reply to Ok, it seems that i didn't by Mihailo Krivokuca
First, though, you should actually enter your music. If you are looking at a blank page - well, measures with only a full measure rest - then of course many of them will fit per line. MuseScore automatically determines how many measures to put on a line based on standard engraving principles. As you add notes to your score, the measures automatically get wider and there will autoamtically be fewer of them per line. So don't worry about fine tuning which measures are on which lines until you are done entering notes and can see for yourself if you need more or fewer measures per line - or, as is normally the case, if the default alyout ends up being just fine as is.
In reply to First, though, you should by Marc Sabatella
Oh, thank you.