From: Jan Nieuwenhuizen Date: Mon, 19 Aug 2002 00:24:50 +0000 (+0000) Subject: * Documentation/user/tutorial.itely (A piano excerpt): X-Git-Tag: release/1.6.0~12 X-Git-Url: https://git.donarmstrong.com/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=f471ec0a33651f33a377128c5f4cc7aa16265881;p=lilypond.git * Documentation/user/tutorial.itely (A piano excerpt): * Documentation/user/introduction.itely (Introduction): Typo fix. --- diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog index e2229cd24f..237c0792f5 100644 --- a/ChangeLog +++ b/ChangeLog @@ -1,5 +1,8 @@ 2002-08-19 Jan Nieuwenhuizen + * Documentation/user/tutorial.itely (A piano excerpt): + * Documentation/user/introduction.itely (Introduction): Typo fix. + * input/test/header-ifelse.ly: Bugfix: call numbers->string only on first three elements of ly-version list. diff --git a/Documentation/user/introduction.itely b/Documentation/user/introduction.itely index 3cc94baa9a..632df42262 100644 --- a/Documentation/user/introduction.itely +++ b/Documentation/user/introduction.itely @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ LilyPond is a program to print sheet music. If you have used notation programs before, then the way to use this program might be surprising at first sight. To print music with lilypond, you have to enter musical codes in a file. Then you run LilyPond on the file, and the -music is produced without any intervention intervention. For example, +music is produced without any user intervention. For example, something like this: @lilypond[fragment,verbatim, relative 1, intertext="produces this"] diff --git a/Documentation/user/tutorial.itely b/Documentation/user/tutorial.itely index 30b530de78..b5cb1e0bf6 100644 --- a/Documentation/user/tutorial.itely +++ b/Documentation/user/tutorial.itely @@ -1891,7 +1891,7 @@ voice, which continues with upward stems: The easiest way to enter multiple voices is demonstrated here. Separate the components of the voice (single notes or entire sequences) with @code{\\} in a simultaneous music expression. The -a@code{\\} separators split first voice, second voice, third voice, and +@code{\\} separators split first voice, second voice, third voice, and so on. As far as relative mode is concerned, the previous note is the