The standard controls in the button bar include
Currently, not all items can be copied and pasted. When a note is pasted, it will, where possible, retain the same pitch, tuplet, and marks as the note copied. Notes can be cut and pasted between and across voices.
Guide-notes appear in the editor to allow fast note-input. They do not appear in the published score. Some buttons on the button-bar allow you to change how these guides work.
Increases the number of guides in the tuplet of selected notes. For example, to show 32nd-note guides:
Alternately, you can simply hover your mouse over the tuplet of interest and press + or - to add or remove guides, respectively.
Shows or hides guides. This can be useful while editing a score, but not adding any notes. Holding shift also will temporarily hide all guides.
While on, guides will follow the cursor vertically. For example, if you have your cursor on the top stave-line, the appropriate guide will move to the top-stave line. While this is off, guides will be available, but will not follow the cursor vertically.
Tuplets are the way that notes are grouped. All note groupings in Musink are referred to as tuplets, including:
For more information on working with tuplets is available on the tuplets page.
This displays the current stem direction of selected notes. Click to change stem direction. To change the default stem direction, change the voice's settings.
Moves objects up or down. This may move
As an alternative to these buttons, you can
Some items have maximum and minimum positions. Clefs, for example, cannot be moved off the stave. Some items, such as accents, cannot be moved vertically, because Musink automatically positions them. Where these marks are positioned can be changed in voice settings.
To change a notehead symbol:
This dropdown can also be used to quickly change a note to a whole-note or half-note. Note that doing so will change the tuplet of the selected notehead if that tuplet is too short. Noteheads have associated keyboard shortcuts.
To add tremolo flags to a note:
The tremolo chosen refers to the maximum number of flags that the note will display. For example, a 16th note with three tremolo flags selected will have one tremolo flag visible (2 standard flags + 1 tremolo flag = 3 flags). If note durations change, Musink will automatically increase or decrease the number of tremolo flags shown so that your tremolo remains the same. = Buzz Rolls = Buzz rolls are often notated with a “Z” on the stem of a note. To add such a Z:
Note that you cannot have both a tremolo flag and a buzz-roll 'Z' on the same note. Buzz-rolls playback as a series of 32nd notes.
See Grace Notes for information on how to create and modify grace notes
Some rests, marks, and textmarks can be excluded from the published score. For more information, see Publish Visibility.
Musink allows staves to be braced or bracketed together (e.g. to create a grand staff). For more details, see Clefs.
In the main window, voices that will be published to one stave are grouped together and assigned a colour. To their left is a Stave Editor: Stave editors let you:
They also contain controls that allow you to:
For more information, see Staves and Voices.
The Mark Bar creates and deletes marks which are directly associated with notes, such as accents. The mark bar is usually docked and collapsed (see image top left). In this state, it may hide some less-used marks. To show these marks expand the mark bar.
You can see all available marks in the bar when it is expanded. To expand the bar, hover over the double-arrows at its top: it will remain expanded until you move the mouse away (see image top right).
To keep the bar expanded (see image bottom right):
To collapse it again, press the square button.
To undock the bar so you can drag it around the screen (see image bottom left):
You can drag the bar around by its top. To re-dock the bar, press the triangle button.