Using a mouse to enter music
- Click the Simple Entry tool . The Simple Entry
Palettes appear. (If they don’t, you’ve probably hidden the palette. Choose Window > Simple Entry Palette
and Simple Entry Rests Palette.) See Simple Entry Palette for more information
on moving and resizing the palette.
- Click the desired note (rhythmic value) icon
in the palette. Click additional tools as needed, such as Sharp, Flat,
Grace, Tuplet, Dot or Tie. Click the staff. A note appears at the
pitch you clicked. To build a chord, click another pitch
above or below the first note.
If you want to enter a tuplet (a triplet, quintuplet, etc.), click
the Tuplet tool on the Simple Entry Palette and the duration of the tuplet
(an eighth note tuplet or a half note tuplet, regardless of the duration
of the first note). In any of these instructions, you can press one of
the shortcut keys on your keyboard to switch tools instead of clicking
an icon (for example, press a number on the numeric keypad 1-8 to select
a duration tool - 64th through double-whole note).
Consult your Quick
Reference Guide (or Simple
Entry Tool) for a complete list of Simple Entry keyboard shortcuts.
- To change
the rhythmic value of a note, click the icon representing the new value;
then click the note.
- To
change the rhythmic value of a rest, select the desired rhythmic-value
icon on the Rests palette, and then click the rest.
- To
change a note to a rest, CTRL+click
the note to select it. Type R. The note turns into a rest.
- To
delete a note, click the Eraser ;
then click the note. The note disappears. If you click on a notehead
that’s part of a chord, only that note disappears. If you click a rest,
it disappears.
- To
move a note vertically, click and drag the note up or down. To move a
rest, CTRL+click
the rest to select it, then drag it up or down. If you want to
move a whole chord up or down, CTRL+click the chord, then press CTRL+A.
- To
hide a note or rest, CTRL+click
the note to select it then press the letter H key. Press the H
key again to display the note or rest again. See also Notes
and Rests (Hide) Plug-in, Notes and Rests (Show) Plug-in.
- To
flip a stem, CTRL+click
the note to select it then press the L key. This process freezes
the stem up or down, so that it’s no longer free to flip if, for example,
it gets transposed. To restore the note to its “flippable” status, press
SHIFT+L.
- To
make a note sharp, flat or natural, click the Sharp Tool , Flat Tool , or Natural Tool ; then click the note.
A sharp, flat or natural appears next to the note, if needed by the key
signature.
- To
raise or lower a note by a half step, double-click the Half Step Up or
Half Step Down icon; then click the note. The note is raised or lowered
a half step. If appropriate for the key signature, an accidental will
appear or change.
- To
remove any accidentals from a note, click the Eraser Tool ; then click the accidental.
- To
hide a courtesy accidental, CTRL+click
the note to select it then press CTRL+SHIFT+-(hyphen). If no accidental is displayed,
CTRL+SHIFT+-(hyphen)
forces a courtesy accidental to appear; for parentheses, press the P key.
- To
tie a note to the next one, double-click the Tie icon ; then click the notehead.
To tie every note of a chord, click its stem. Click the notehead (for
a single note) or the stem (for a chord) to remove the tie.
- To flip
a tie, press CTRL+F.
- To
dot a note, double-click the Dot icon ;
then click the note. Click again to add another dot (you can add
up to ten dots). To remove the dots, click the Eraser Tool ; then click the dot. All of the dots are removed.
- To
change a note to a grace note, double- click the Grace Note icon , then click the note.
Click the note again to restore it to full size. Press Alt+G when the grace note is selected
to toggle between grace note and full size. If “Always Slash Flagged Grace
Notes” in unchecked in Document
Options-Grace Notes, press Alt+G to cycle between full size, grace
note unslashed, and grace note slashed.
- To
create or break a beam, CTRL+click
the note to select it then press the / key. If the notes were flagged
separately, they’re now beamed. If they were beamed, the beam is broken
(and the notes are individually flagged, if they’re not beamed to any
other notes). Use SHIFT+/ to restore the beaming to the defaults found
in the Document Options-Beams.
- To
flatten a beam, CTRL+click
the note to select it then press Alt+/.
If the beam was angled, it will now be flattened. If the beam was already
flattened, the beam will now return to the default angle. See Flat
Beams Plug-in, Flat Beams (Remove) Plug-in.
- To
enter a tuplet, click the Simple Tuplet tool and the desired rhythmic duration icon, then
click the staff. For more complicated tuplets, SHIFT-click the
staff to display the Simple
Entry Tuplet Definition dialog box.