John Morton
Member
Accidental: here's the link: https://musescore.org/en/node/88591#comment-390991 you may have to log into the forum, cheers, John Morton.Could you share it please John?
Accidental: here's the link: https://musescore.org/en/node/88591#comment-390991 you may have to log into the forum, cheers, John Morton.Could you share it please John?
Yes, you do; open the score wizard, and on the first page of the setup, there are drop-down lists to select pagesize for both score and parts. Why do you find it necessary to deliberately spread disinformation?
And I still maintain that if you find Finale's online instruction manual "obtuse", then you've clearly failed to grasp how to use it ...
Call me "evangelical" if you like, but I find your attempts to denigrate a world-leading product, seemingly based primarily on your own ignorance, somewhat obnoxious ...
Re-reading your earlier reply, we appear to be a cross-purposes. Yes, you can select it from the list - I've done this many times - but importing an A4 file requires the short procedure I mentioned indeed, paper control in general is more complicated. Incidentally, I spent a long period of time working on Finale to acquire the necessary skills. I'm not attempting to denigrate the program but where a product, any product, fails to live up to its claims I believe people have a right to know.Yes, you do; open the score wizard, and on the first page of the setup, there are drop-down lists to select pagesize for both score and parts. Why do you find it necessary to deliberately spread disinformation?
And I still maintain that if you find Finale's online instruction manual "obtuse", then you've clearly failed to grasp how to use it ...
Call me "evangelical" if you like, but I find your attempts to denigrate a world-leading product, seemingly based primarily on your own ignorance, somewhat obnoxious ...
Re-reading your earlier reply, we appear to be a cross-purposes. Yes, you can select it from the list - I've done this many times - but importing an A4 file requires the short procedure I mentioned indeed, paper control in general is more complicated. Incidentally, I spent a long period of time working on Finale to acquire the necessary skills. I'm not attempting to denigrate the program but where a product, any product, fails to live up to its claims I believe people have a right to know.
I would expect page settings attributes to be imported with the file which is the case, I feel sure, but Finale can't recognise them.
Thanks for your input on this. I was using 2014 (I've just upgraded again). There's a 16 line explanation of the procedure for changing the default page size to A4 so let no one say this is straightforward. My own attempts to do this simple action ended in frustration, initially, at least, which is just plain wrong. That's my point. Obtuse Finale, again. Printing out part of the Finale manual as it is offered (which entails destroying a tropical rainforest) produced badly truncated page layouts with long vertical paragraphs an inch wide down the left hand side and the other paras moved sideways, destroying the logical sequence. This is because the page layout was tailored to US letter size. The procedure you described is, surely, inconvenient?What version of Finale you're using?
I've never encountered a problem with a version of Finale > 2009.d1 failing to recognize and properly interpret the <page-height> or <page-width> XML tags. In fact, I just downloaded Elite Syncopations (created in Musescore 1.2, using a custom page size of 223.706 x 175.197 mm), from OpenMusicScore.org, opened the XML file in TextEdit and manually changed the <page-height> and <page-width> values to 2112.264 and 1493.52 [NB: scaling <millimeters>7.112</millimeters> = 297 x 210 mm], respectively, saved it and it imported into Finale 2010.r4 Mac at A4.
It really is counterintuitive. The worst aspect, by far, is the need to constantly change tools in order to do anything. Selecting notes etc. is tricky and selecting regions even worse.I just want to throw my tuppence into the fountain:
I have been a sib user since v2. I can do almost anything I want in sib, one way or another. I loathe finale and all its get. It is, to my way of thinking totally counterintuitive.
I have, and am maintaining, a copy of MuseScore which I do use but mostly to clean up Music XML files, whic it does a much better job of than Sibelius.
I have been working with Lilypond, but, as Andrew says, it is a real faff and I can't see me sticking with it long term.
What the Steinberg offering will be - if it comes to fruition before I reach my dotage - I can't say and by then I might not be able to afford it.
If I were to recommend software to someone looking to start from scratch? It would definitely be MuseScore. it has the huge advantage that it is free. It works pretty much as yoiu would expect and, most importantly, it is being updated regularly.
This is because the page layout was tailored to US letter size. The procedure you described is, surely, inconvenient?
The problem is that some comments on here (not necessarily yours) indicate that their authors have no experience of other programs by means of which they might make comparisons.