Note Duration |
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The procedures below describe how to change the duration of a note by directly editing the note. You can also change the duration of a note by deleting the rest after it, or by dropping a rest on top of the start or end of the note. See Deleting Rests to Extend the Durations of Previous Notes and Using Rests to Erase Notes.
Composer will display the Note Palette:
-- OR -- Type the equivalent keyboard commands for the buttons, such as "81d" for dotted eighth note. -- OR -- Type D+ The procedure for changing the duration with D+ The quarter note is selected with a mouse click: In each of the subsequent pictures below, the keys D+ By default, the as-performed duration of the changed note will be slightly less than the as-notated duration. The result of this is that sequential notes will play in a legato style, that is, with almost no gaps between them. Sometimes this is not what you will want. You may want a more crisp sound, with brief gaps of silence between them. You can individually adjust the as-performed duration of each note, or of several selected notes at a time. Composer also enables you to set a default as-performed duration corresponding to each standard note size, so that whenever you add a note, its as-performed duration will automatically be adjusted. For example, you can set the as-performed duration of a quarter note to be the equivalent, of, say a dotted eighth note. For details, see Saving and Applying Note Duration Adjustments. You also have the option to change the as-notated duration without changing the as-performed (heard) length of the note.
-- OR -- Type SHIFT+Y. Composer will display the Piano Roll Palette:
-- OR -- Type "en" for edit notation only. Now the piano roll rectangles will be white to indicate that the performed timings are temporarily locked, as illustrated in the next picture.
The result of this last procedure is illustrated below: |
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