SCORE survival guide

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This page is a detailed step-by-step tutorial for inputing music in the SCORE editor (MS-DOS version). This guide is useful for the first-time user to get used to how to do basic navigation in the SCORE editor. This tutorial is useful for practice entering the exercises on the SCORE user input page.

Inputting Music

Type the INP (or INPUT) command at the SCORE command prompt to start input mode in Score:

Type "INP" to start input mode.

This will take you to the Input menu which are lists of parameters at the top of the screen. Use the Arrow keys to move between the parameters. Type numbers to change them. The meter and mode are not really useful to set. Mostly the size of the music, and the starting and stoping point for the staves are useful settings. An important one is the spacing parameter (but only when dealing with more that one voice/layer on a staff). Here is what the screen should look like after pressing "INP Enter":

After typing "INP" to start input mode.

After the settings in the input menu are as desired, press the space bar to start typing the five-stage user input.

Here is a demonstration of the 5 stages for one of the basic melodic examples. First typing the pitch stage:

Typing pitch stage in input mode.

Then after pressing Enter, you will see pitches on the staff (in the Windows version the notes appear on the staff as you type them). Then you can type the rhythm stage:

Typing rhythm stage in input mode.

Note the information at the bottom of the screen. You can click on those boxes to insert rhythms, or press F4 to insert a quarter note for example. Notice that after you press Enter after the rhythm stage, the notes area assigned rhythmic values, and there are little (temporary) numbers shown above each note:

Typing marks stage in input mode.

In this case there are no marks, beams or slurs to add to the music. You can type :+ Enter three times, or type g+ Enter to finish inputing the music:

Terminating input sequence early.

At this point SCORE asks if you want to save the data. It is asking if you want to save the text you just typed (ultimately not the graphical notation data that SCORE will generate from this text). You should type "Y" as a beginner and then view the data in a text editor to see what it looks like. This data can also be read into SCORE again with the RE command (helpful if you mess up the notation and don't want to enter by hand again):

Input mode data save.

The data is text, so it is best to add the extension .txt to the filename. Also note that the filename base can only have 8 characters (this is MS-DOS):

Input mode data save.

SCORE then starts to enter staff two (note that staff one is the bottom staff on the page). Press esc to exit input mode and return to command mode.

Staff 2 input menu

Saving Music

It is wise at this point to save the music (in its graphical form). Type "sa exam1 Enter" to save the current page to the hard disk. This will create the file "exam1.mus"

Save contents to disk

Notice that after you save the file, there is a message in the top right corner saying that the file is saved, and the top left corner lists the name of the file:

Save status at top of window

Clearing Music

Try typing "RS Enter" to clear the contents of the editor:

Clear contents of editor with RS command

This will put the editor in the initial state:

Cleared contents of editor after RS command

Load Music

You can load your music back into the editor with the "G" command (G = get). The default extension is .mus, so you do not have to type that part if you do not want to:

Get the contents of a binary file.

After getting the file, you should see your music back in the editor:

Reloaded music content.

Alternatively, you can load the TEXT version that you created at the input mode stage. This is a form of SCORE macro which must be read with the RE command. Note the file extension is needed in this case since there is not default extension for macro files:

Reloaded music content from text file macro.

The read file will look the same as the binary exam1.mus file that was just loaded (because you have not done any further editing of the data after it was input). You can say Y to go back to input mode to alter the music, or press no to go back to command mode.

Reloaded music content from text file macro.

Here is what the contents of the editor look like if typing N:

Back in command mode after reading text file with music.

Lineup and Justify

One of the more important commands is the **LJ** command. When you enter music in input mode, the music is spaced linearly: quarter notes take up half the space of half notes, half notes take up half the spaces of whole notes, etc. Music spacing does not display music in this 2:1 ratio. In score it is about 1.51:1, such as two half notes take up the space of 1.51 whole notes instead of 2. To apply this geometric spacing to the music, type **LJ**, and then type two numbers (the bottom staff and how many staves to align while justifying). In this case "**1 1**" for a single staff.

LJ command in progress.

Notice that SCORE will box the music that is going to be aligned and justified. Press esc or B to cancel, or any other key to finish the LJ command.

LJ command in progress.

After the LJ command runs, the spacing of the music looks better (but not much difference for this example since the notes are almost all quarter notes):

LJ command finished.

Printing

Press F6 or type **PRINT** on the command line to go to the print menu:

PRINT menu.

Type "**1 exam1** Enter" to change the output from the laser printer (probably not connected to computer) to a file instead. The default extension is .eps (for Encapsulated PostScript):

PRINT menu, changing filename to save to.

Then type "G" or press F6 to start printing the page of music to the file exam1.eps:

Start printing the music to a file.

After the music is printed, you will be taken back to the command mode. You can also try changing the margins (menu item 4), the scaling (menu item 2), Mirroring the music of photooffset reproduction (menu item 10). etc. Type "4 .5 6" to change the left margin to 0.5 inches and the bottom margin to 6 inches.

The generated EPS file can be loaded directly into Micrsoft Word for example. To generate a PDF file from the EPS file, you can do this with GhostScript in linux, OS X terminal or Windows (if Ghost Script is installed on your computer)

   ps2pdf -sPAPERSIZE=letter file.eps file.pdf


Here is an example of the EPS file opened in OS X with Preview.app:

Final EPS output.

MIDI playback

The music can be played back by typing "PLAY" in from command mode.

Start play mode.

At the top of the play screen, a list of number will be shown. For simple cases these values aren't interesting, but for multi-staff systems and multiple systems on a page, this list is used to specify which staves should played together if the program doesn't figure it out correctly. Press the space bar to listen to the music.

In play mode.

Boxer.app tips

Boxer.app is an MS-DOS emulator for OS X. Here are some tips related to using SCORE in boxer.app:

  • Type Fn+M to toggle the insert/overwrite key, since Apples do not have such a key thanks to Jeff Raskin.
  • To get the mouse out of Boxer, do Command+click.
  • Command+F toggles full-screen view

The the list of shortcuts for Boxer.app for more tips (also see the built-in help system for a list of the shortcuts, since these will be more up-to-date).