X-Git-Url: https://git.donarmstrong.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=Documentation%2Fsnippets%2Fusing-the-whiteout-property.ly;h=77bc141d219a36d1ae2f934925f39670574606e9;hb=90e4d7057f3857da049dfda3d130017d4719bd6b;hp=fd76cb9390e1f99e90126d6c8a934cdd1902a1e1;hpb=54b02666750062788185bd3f99e644d621e348c2;p=lilypond.git diff --git a/Documentation/snippets/using-the-whiteout-property.ly b/Documentation/snippets/using-the-whiteout-property.ly index fd76cb9390..77bc141d21 100644 --- a/Documentation/snippets/using-the-whiteout-property.ly +++ b/Documentation/snippets/using-the-whiteout-property.ly @@ -4,60 +4,38 @@ % and then run scripts/auxiliar/makelsr.py % % This file is in the public domain. -%% Note: this file works from version 2.14.0 -\version "2.14.0" +%% Note: this file works from version 2.19.32 +\version "2.19.32" \header { -%% Translation of GIT committish: 70f5f30161f7b804a681cd080274bfcdc9f4fe8c + lsrtags = "editorial-annotations, expressive-marks" - texidoces = " - -Se puede imprimir cualquier objeto gráfico sobre un fondo blanco para -enmascarar parte de los objetos que están por debajo. Esto puede ser -útil para mejorar el aspecto de las colisiones en situaciones -complejas cuando no es práctico reposicionar los objetos. Es -necesario establecer explícitamente la propiedad de capa -(@code{layer}) para controlar qué objetos resultan enmascarados por el -fondo blanco. - -En este ejemplo, la colisión de la ligadura de unión con la indicación -de compás resulta mejorada enmascarando la parte de la ligadura que -cruza a la indicación de compás mediante el establecimiento de la -propiedad @code{whiteout} de @code{TimeSignature}. Para hacer esto, -se mueve @code{TimeSignature} a una capa por encima de @code{Tie}, que -se deja en la capa predeterminada de 1, y @code{StaffSymbol} se mueve -a una capa por encima de @code{TimeSignature} de manera que no resulte -enmascarada. - -" - - doctitlees = "Uso de la propiedad whiteout" - - lsrtags = "expressive-marks, editorial-annotations" texidoc = " -Any graphical object can be printed over a white background to -mask parts of objects that lie beneath. This can be useful to -improve the appearance of collisions in complex situations when -repositioning objects is impractical. It is necessary to explicitly -set the @code{layer} property to control which objects are masked -by the white background. +Any graphical object can be printed over a white background to mask +parts of objects that lie beneath. This can be useful to improve the +appearance of collisions in complex situations when repositioning +objects is impractical. It is necessary to explicitly set the +@code{layer} property to control which objects are masked by the white +background. In this example the collision of the tie with the time signature is improved by masking out the part of the tie that crosses the time -signature by setting the @code{whiteout} property of @code{TimeSignature}. -To do this @code{TimeSignature} is moved to a layer above @code{Tie}, which -is left in the default layer of 1, and @code{StaffSymbol} is moved to a -layer above @code{TimeSignature} so it is not masked. +signature by setting the @code{whiteout} property of +@code{TimeSignature}. To do this @code{TimeSignature} is moved to a +layer above @code{Tie}, which is left in the default layer of 1, and +@code{StaffSymbol} is moved to a layer above @code{TimeSignature} so it +is not masked. + " doctitle = "Using the whiteout property" } % begin verbatim { - \override Score.StaffSymbol #'layer = #4 - \override Staff.TimeSignature #'layer = #3 + \override Score.StaffSymbol.layer = #4 + \override Staff.TimeSignature.layer = #3 b'2 b'~ - \once \override Staff.TimeSignature #'whiteout = ##t + \once \override Staff.TimeSignature.whiteout = ##t \time 3/4 b' r4 }