Layout - 2nd voice note placement

• Jan 5, 2016 - 16:53

How do I move the 2nd voice notes to the right of the 1st voice. MuseScore places them on the left which is awkward for slurs & ties.
Also, can I stretch the space between just one line of staves (without affecting the whole score) ?


Comments

In reply to by Isaac Weiss

All sorted now, thanks - I moved the V2 notes to the right with Inspector/Chord>Horizontal offset palette.
But I wasn't very clear about my other layout difficulty. Is it possible to increase the space BETWEEN the treble & bass staves in just one line ? I don't want to increase the space between treble & bass for the whole score.

In reply to by Kinsy

I'd still like to see the score to figure out what's going on—no re-positioning of voices should be necessary ordinarily. Voice 2 should be below voice 1, or to the right of it, by default. Are voices 3 and 4 being used at all in the same area? Please do attach the score here, if you're willing.

As to the second question, a spacer from the Breaks and Spacers palette is what you need. See https://musescore.org/en/handbook/breaks-and-spacers.

In reply to by Isaac Weiss

Page 2 of the score attached.
I have moved all the V2 notes back to their original positions (ie Horizontal offset 0.00sp) so you can see that they defaulted to the left of V1.
They are the first notes in bars 3-5, 7-12, and, as you will see, in bar 13 the V2 quavers are on either side of the V1 chord.

Attachment Size
Page 2.mscz 31.07 KB

In reply to by Kinsy

This is an interesting case, where in one chord the Voice 1 notes are both above and below the notes in Voice 2. But I think the default layout is correct. If there were no horizontal offset at all, you would have a stack on notes between two paralell stems, and it would be impossible to tell which noteheads were attached to which stem. If Voice 2 went to the right, either it would move just far enough that the up- and down-pointing stems would align—which would be the same problem—or so far over that it would look like they occurred at a different time position. Moving just the slightest bit to the left seems like the best way to go in this circumstance.

In reply to by Isaac Weiss

Thanks.
I had already moved all the V2 notes right of V2 - it was v. simple in the Inspector palette. I just moved them all back in a second version of the score which I attached because you wanted to see it, Zack.

All the help and advice in this forum is very much appreciated - Thank You !!

FWIW, the rule for laying out notes is nowhere near as simple as voice 1 left, voice 2, or vice versa. For one thing, it's about stem direction, not voices - if you force the stems in voice 1 down and/or stems 2 up, you will get different results. For another, the correct result depends on whether the notes overlap (downstem note higher than upstem) or collide (both notes on same line) or whether they are a second apart. And also on some other factors, like whether there are notes that can be merged (same pitch, same duration), also on things like the presence of dots. It's all quite complicated, but we follow the layout rules given in Elaine Gould's "Behind Bars" almost to a "t", with only a couple of odd corner cases where we end up producing something she lists as the second-most-desirable layout rather than the most :-).

Anyhow, looking at your score, I'm not sure which note in particularly you'd like to change, but offhand, everything looks correct to me. In particular, the arrangement of the overlapping chords in bars 3-5 are all as recommended, as is the arrangement in bar 13. Putting the downstem chord to the left in these cases where there is overlap but no collision allows the noteheads to partially overlap, thus saving space. Moving the downstem chord to the right in these cases would take more space and also increase the likelihood for confusion as to whether these chords are simultaneous or not, which is why that arrangement is not normally recommended.

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