![]() ![]() You can even specify an open metre with an X. There are ways to create alternating and interchangeable time signatures and I can create an aggregate time signature by using the pipe character between two time signatures and you can see that Dorico automatically inserts a dashed barline for me. You can create the most complex time signatures using the popover. And if you want to specify a beat group, but just show the numerator as a number then I use square brackets. I can create additive time signatures by typing, for example, 3+2+2/8. This is an extremely powerful popover, where you can input basic time signatures such as 3 slash 4 or 4 slash 4, or “c” for common time and “cutc” for cut common time. Gradual tempos such as ritardando and accelerando are also understood.īecause we utilise the key command Shift+T for Tempo, when it comes Time Signatures we use the key command Shift+M for Metre. I can also specify metronome marks by typing, say, q (for quarter note) equals 144 or e+dot (for dotted eighth note) = 72 … If Dorico can recognise any part of what I type as a Tempo it has knowledge of, it will use it to set the metronome mark, but everything I type will be retained. I can type quite freely into the Tempo popover. The Tempo popover is summoned by Shift+T. I can type 3s for 3 sharps or 4f for 4 flats. Here I can type, for example, an uppercase G for G major, or a lowercase G for G minor. The shortcut for the Key Signatures popover is Shift+K. Then I simply type something such as ‘tenor’, press Enter and Dorico inputs a tenor clef for me.ĭorico often recognises different ways of referring to the same items, so for example I can also type f to get an F clef, or bass clef as it’s often known. I can tell it’s the Clefs popover by the icon here that matches the button over in the notations toolbox. So, with something selected in the score, if I type the key command Shift+C, I get the Clefs popover. You summon the various popovers by holding down the Shift key and pressing a different letter for each category. There is another way, however, to input these musical items and we’ve designed it to be a really quick and powerful way to create many notations without having to take your fingers off the computer keyboard.Įach category has its own popover that you type text into and when you press Enter, Dorico can recognise what you’ve written and automatically convert it to a musical object. For example, here in the time signatures panel. Some panels contain controls to help me build up more sophisticated musical items. If there is an active selection in the music, then any item I click in the panel will be created at that rhythmic position. And many of these sections contain ‘palettes’ of musical items that can be clicked and input into your music. Within each category, similar musical items are grouped into sections that can be expanded or collapsed. The principle is the same across all of the notations panels. There are also buttons for inputting rehearsal marks, text and lyrics, but these do not require their own dedicated panels. Tremolos bars and barlines holds and pauses The categories are clefs key signatures time signatures or metres The panel displays one category of music notations at a time and I can change that category by clicking on a different button in the toolbox. I can also toggle it open and closed with the (icon) button. I open the panel by clicking on one of these buttons (icons) in the Notation toolbox or with the key command Ctrl+9 (that’s Cmd+9 on Mac). I’m in Write mode, and I’d like to introduce you to the Notations panel which lives over on the right hand side of the Dorico window. I’ll be showing you how to input many of the main types of music notations available to you in Dorico, both by using the Notations panel with the mouse and also using the quick and powerful popovers that you access with the computer keyboard directly in the music. Presented here in written form with the kind permission of its creator, Anthony Hughes, this tutorial is titled “How to Quickly Input Different Types of Notations in Dorico”… □ This article is a transcription of one of the excellent tutorial videos posted to the official Dorico YouTube channel.
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