Rehearsal marks invisible with "Hide empty staves"
My rehearsal marks are invisible when "Hide empty staves" are on.
Version 1.3 revision 5702
My rehearsal marks are invisible when "Hide empty staves" are on.
Version 1.3 revision 5702
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Comments
I believe this will be fixed in the next release, but you can check, by using a nighly build.
In reply to I believe this will be fixed by Jojo-Schmitz
Can't check since I'll have to upgrade to the latest ubuntu as well. Not going into this mess right now. I'll take your word for it and wait. Any idea on when the next release will be?
In reply to Can't check since I'll have by rtega
Are you sure about the need to upgrade ubuntu to be able to run a nightly build?
In reply to Are you sure about the need by Jojo-Schmitz
Well, strictly spoken I could do it but I have to manually upgrade glibc which could result in a non-working system. I've no intension of doing that just to check on a nightly build of Musescore.
In reply to Well, strictly spoken I could by rtega
OK, so now I have to take your word on this :-)
If you provide score that show the bug in 1.3, I can check it in Windows nightly.
Edit: as per #18835: Rehearsal marks disappear when hiding empty staves it is fixed
Just to be clear: it is not that rehearsal marks are *always* lost when hide empty staves is on. Only if it is the top staff of the system that gets hidden. So you can work around this by making sure the top staff always has something in it.
In reply to Just to be clear: it is not by Marc Sabatella
This defeats the entire purpose of "hide empty staves", doesn't it?
In reply to This defeats the entire by rtega
Indeed. That's why it got fixed in 2.0 ;-)
In reply to This defeats the entire by rtega
Well, not the *entire* purpose. Plenty of scores would still benefit from this even if the top staff never gets hidden. Eg, orchestra scores where the brass lay out a lot, lead sheets that need to reduce from two staves to one but it doesn't matter which, etc. IN fact, it's probably a pretty unusual score where not being able to hide the top staff results in no benefit at all. But I can certainly think of examples, like a score for a single solo instrument and piano accompaniment where the solo instrument drops out occasionally.