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Steinberg Nuendo 3 Score Layout And Printing Manual

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    							NUENDOWorking with symbols 8 – 161
    The symbol palettes
    Displaying palettes
    From the main menus
    1.Select Symbol Palettes from the Scores menu.
    2.From the submenu that appears, select any of the symbol palettes.
    3.To open another palette, select it like the first one.
    You can have more than one symbol palette on the screen at a time.  
    						
    							NUENDO8 – 162 Working with symbols
    Directly from the palette
    1.Right-click (Win) or [Ctrl]-click (Mac) in a palette.
    A pop-up menu appears.
    The symbol palette pop-up.
    2.If you want the new palette to replace the current one, simply select 
    the desired palette from the list.
    The window will now show the selected palette.
    3.If you want to display the new palette without closing the current one, 
    hold down [Ctrl]/[Command] and select a palette from the list.
    A new window opens with the selected palette. The first palette window remains open.
    Moving and handling palettes
    Palettes are handled as any window, which means that you can:
    •Move a palette around by dragging its title bar. 
    •Close a palette by clicking its close box.
    In addition, you can select whether the palette should be shown hori-
    zontally or vertically, by right-clicking ([Ctrl]-clicking under Mac OS if 
    you’re using a mouse with only one button, or haven’t configured the 
    mouse for right-clicking) and selecting “Toggle” from the context 
    menu that appears.   
    						
    							NUENDOWorking with symbols 8 – 163
    The available symbols
    The illustrations below show all the symbols available, divided by 
    group (see above). The captions contain additional information about 
    the symbols in the group.
    The “Clef etc.” palette.
    The “Dynamics” palette.
    Clef change
    Key change (and/or display transpose change)Time signature change
    Slur down
    Slur up Dynamics
    Diminuendo
    “Dynamic” crescendo
    Tie up
    Crescendo
    “Double” cresc./dim.Bezier Slur
    Tie down  
    						
    							NUENDO8 – 164 Working with symbols
    Line Octave
    Tuplet bracketLine Octave
    Tuplet bracket Beam
    Beam BeamBeam Arpeggio
    Hand indicationArpeggioArpeggio
    Trill
    Trill Trill StrumStrum Staccato
    Tenuto
    Accent
    PizzicatoAccent
    Accent
    AccentAccent
    Staccato
    Staccato
    ArticulationTremolo Bow up
    FallTremolo Bow down
    Articulation Glissando
    Articulation Articulation ArticulationFermat Thumb pos.Damped
    Fall Fermat
    Diamond note Spoken tone
    Glissando Closed Hihat Open Hihat
    Bracket beam Acc. voice
    Main voice
    Bracket beam
    Articulation
    Staccato
    Staccato
    Staccato Staccato
    The “Note Symbols” palette. These symbols 
    are always tied to a note.The “Line/Trill” palette. Please note that 
    the arpeggios, hand indication and strum 
    symbols are all “note dependant”! Tremolo
    DoitFermatHand indication
    Segno (sizable)
    Ending
    Ending Trill
    Trill Turn 
    						
    							NUENDOWorking with symbols 8 – 165
    The “Graphics” palette. This contains note heads, accidentals and rests that can be 
    “drawn in” without affecting the score in any way. They do not affect MIDI playback!
    The “Other” palette.
    The “Layout” palette. All these symbols are drawn in their own “layer”.
    Lyrics
    Guitar chord symbol
    Chord Regular text
    Block Text (import)
    Pedal down
    CodaRepeat
    Pedal up
    Segno
    Segno (sizable)
    Box symbolRepeat
    Keyboard symbol
    Segno
    EndingPage Text
    Rehearsal mark
    Coda
    Ending D.C. al Fine (text)
    Box symbol Tempo as note value
    Tempo as numberRehearsal mark Text (layout layer)
    Keyboard symbol Da Capo al Coda (text)
    Fine (text)Dal Segno al Fine (text)
    Dal Segno al Coda (text)   
    						
    							NUENDO8 – 166 Working with symbols
    The “Global” palette. These symbols will be present in all layouts.
    The “Words” palette. This is described on page 231.
    The “User Symbols” palette. This is described on page 204.
    Further details about many of the symbols can be found on page 197.   
    						
    							NUENDOWorking with symbols 8 – 167
    Creating a custom palette
    On the Symbol Palettes submenu, you will find a palette called Custom. 
    Nuendo allows you to fill this palette with any selection of symbols from 
    other palettes. In this way, you can have instant access to the symbols 
    you use often:
    1.Open the Custom palette.
    If it’s the first time you are using this, it will be empty.
    2.Open another palette from which you want to copy a symbol.
    3.Hold down [Alt]/[Option] and click on the symbol you want to add to 
    the Custom palette.
    The symbol appears on the Custom palette.
    4.Repeat this with other symbols.
    •To remove a symbol from the Custom palette, hold down [Alt]/[Option] 
    and click on it. 
    						
    							NUENDO8 – 168 Working with symbols
    Important! – Symbols, staves and voices
    Most symbols belong to a staff when inserted. Only note symbols, slurs 
    and ties are an exception. They belong to notes and therefore to voices. 
    It is extremely important that the correct staff is active when you insert 
    a symbol (if you are editing multiple staves, of course).
    If you for example insert a symbol with the wrong staff active, the sym-
    bol might later appear to have disappeared, simply because you edit 
    another configuration of tracks (the track you actually inserted the 
    symbol to might not have been opened for editing).
    The same is true for note symbols and their relation to voices. Make 
    sure the correct voice is active when inserting symbols or they might 
    wind up at the wrong position, fermats may be turned upside down etc.
    Layout symbols work slightly differently. Instead of belonging to a cer-
    tain staff or voice, they belong to a layout. Since different track combi-
    nations use different layouts, this means that if you insert a layout 
    symbol in the score when you are editing two tracks (for example a 
    trumpet and a saxophone part), it will not be there when you view 
    each track by itself in the Score Editor. If you want the same symbols 
    to appear in other layouts as well, you can copy the form of one layout 
    to another. If you want a symbol to appear in all layouts, you can use 
    the Global Symbols palette. 
    						
    							NUENDOWorking with symbols 8 – 169
    Adding symbols to the score
    Making space and handling margins
    •If you find there isn’t enough space between staves to add symbols (like for 
    example text) please see page 264 for info on how to separate the staves.
    •If you find the score looks crammed after adding symbols, check out the sec-
    tion on automatic layout on page 268.
    Symbols you add outside the margins will not be printed!
    About the Pencil tool
    Unlike the other MIDI editors, there is no Pencil tool among the tools 
    on the Score Editor toolbar. Instead, the Pencil tool is “automatically” 
    selected when you insert symbols. There are various rules for how this 
    is done:
    •Normally, the Pencil tool is automatically selected when you click on a 
    symbol in a palette.
    •However, if the option “Double Click Symbol to get Pencil tool” is ac-
    tivated in the Preferences–Scores dialog, you need to double click 
    the symbol to get the Pencil tool.
    This is useful if you want to insert symbols using the Staff Functions menu as de-
    scribed below (and therefore don’t want the Pencil tool to appear every time you select 
    a symbol).
    •In the same Preferences dialog, you will find an option called “Display 
    Arrow tool after Inserting Symbol”. When this is activated, the Object 
    Selection (“Arrow”) tool is automatically selected after you have in-
    serted a symbol.
    If you want to insert a lot of symbols with the Pencil tool, you may want to deactivate 
    this option. 
    						
    							NUENDO8 – 170 Working with symbols
    Adding note symbols
    Adding a symbol to one note
    1.Make sure the Note Symbols palette is visible.
    2.Click (or double click) on the desired symbol in the palette.
    As mentioned above, the “Double Click Symbol to get Pencil tool” preference deter-
    mines whether you need to double click. In any case, the Pencil tool is automatically 
    selected.
    3.Either click on the note or above or below it.
    If you click on the note, the symbol is put in at a predefined distance from the note. If 
    you instead click “above or below” the note, you decide for a vertical position yourself. 
    In either case, the symbol is aligned horizontally with the note. It can later be moved 
    up/down.
    Clicking on a note inserts the note symbol (in this case a tenuto) at a predefined 
    distance from the note head.
    There are two options in the Notation Style dialog (Switches tab) on 
    the Scores–Global Settings menu that affect the vertical positioning 
    of note symbols:
    •Accents above Stems.
    When this is activated, accent note symbols are displayed at the stem side of notes in-
    stead of the note head.
    •Accents above Staves.
    When this is activated, accent note symbols are displayed above the staff, regardless 
    of the stem direction of the notes. This setting overrides the “Accents above Stems” 
    option. 
    						
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