Could be interesting to see a side by side showing one of your charts in Sibelius using Inkpen and whatever your preferred notation font was vs one in MuseScore using MuseJazz or Petaluma Script and the corresponding notation font. But I haven't done a detailed comparison. I think you'll findthe notation fonts themselves different enough between Sibelius and MuseScore that a slight difference in appearance of the chord symbol fonts mighty not be so noticeable in practice. But otherwise, I guess you could install a font editor and copy the symbol to the proper location. Perhaps a more up-to-date version of the font might be better in that respect. My guess is Inkpen is designed to work with programs that don't know about these standards and thus only provides a sharp sign a the "#" codepoint and not at the proper Unicode or SMuFL codepoints. We deliberate yhcnage the plain "#" sign into a real sharp sign, using the standard Unicode and/or SMuFL codepoints. Or use Character Map on Windows, or whatever equivalent your OS might provide.It's not puzzling if the font is non-standard. That gives you a wider range of symbols you can copy & paste from. There might be a way to enter the markup directly, but I think there have been some pains taken to *not* expose the markup.īTW, you can also type text into a regular text element in musescore - staff text, title, whatever, and have full access to the F2 text symbol palette. In that case, it's probably easiest to change to a Bb instuments, copy the flat sign, then change back to whatever you are wanting to use and paste the flat sign into the name. Of course, that doesn't help if we're talking about a very obscure instrument MuseScore doesn't have an entry for - a Gb Crumhorn or something. Or if you do need to change later, use Change Instrument in the same Staff Properties dialog, which changes the name as well. Eg, add "Bb clarinet" as the actual instrument, don't add piano then change name. Easiest way if to simply add the proper instrument in the first place - then the flat is filled in for you.
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