This also works with ‘Lyric Input’ without any other changing of fonts etc, and does seem to work with almost all fonts as he says. Marc is correct though: If you use (In unicode mode, holding option/alt) 266D the flat symbol will be the same size as the font you are using. You can resize it of course and change the baseline. If, for example, you use the code E260 from the Steinberg Document, (in Unicode Mode) you will get a flat, but it will be small. However, if you change your keyboard input to Unicode Hex Input you can just punch in the numbers while holding down the ‘option’ key on a Mac or ‘Alt’ on a PC. You can indeed copy and paste the Glyphs from the Steinberg SMuFL document that Dan linked to in post #4 above…you will then have to resize them and edit the baseline to get them to line up with your other text. Thanks everyone! I have finally got to grips with the previous mysteries of Unicode, so I will share my findings:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |