Difference between revisions of "MuseScore"

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* http://www.musescore.org MuseScore program website.
 
* http://www.musescore.org MuseScore program website.
 
* http://musescore.org/en/download MuseScore download page.
 
* http://musescore.org/en/download MuseScore download page.
* http://sourceforge.net/projects/mscore/files MuseScore source code.
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* https://github.com/musescore/MuseScore MuseScore source code.
 
* http://www.musescore.com Score sharing site for MuseScore files.
 
* http://www.musescore.com Score sharing site for MuseScore files.
 
* http://www.musescore.org/en/handbook MuseScore online documentation:
 
* http://www.musescore.org/en/handbook MuseScore online documentation:

Revision as of 07:04, 14 January 2020

MuseScore is a free open-source graphical music-notation editor that is available for all three major operating systems: linux, Apple MacOS, and Microsoft Windows. This is possible due to the use of the cross-platform graphical window interface called Qt.

MuseScore' user interface is an intersection of those found in Sibelius and Finale. All three notation programs have significant overlap in their user interface conceptualization and organization. But there are differences in how each of these programs behave, which hinders users' facility in more than one of these programs at a time.

Finale has been around the longest of the three notation editors, and has been dominant in the U.S. where it was originally developed. Sibelius was originally created for the Acorn computer in the U.K. MuseScore development started around 2002.

Exercises

Notes and Lyrics

This exercise introduces note entry (PDF file).

Ex1-mary.svg

Octaves, Slurs, Fingerings and Text

A demonstration of how to add fingerings, slurs as well as dealing more with octave transposition during data entry on the computer keyboard.

Chords

A demonstration of how to enter chords. Chords can also be entered by interval: Shft plus a number will add a diatonic interval below the current note in a chord. Alt plus a number will add a diatonic interval above the current note in a chord.

Voices/Layers

A demonstration of how to place multiple voices onto a single staff.

Links