Special Tools Palette
        
         
        How to get there
        From the 
 Window menu, choose Advanced Tools. Click the Special Tools tool 
  
 on the Advanced Tools 
 Palette. 
 If the palette does not appear, choose Special Tools Palette from the 
 Window menu.
        What it does
        Using the Special Tools Palette, you can 
 edit any measure on the screen at any view size. You can move, resize, 
 hide, and reshape the palette on the screen as you like. To change layers, 
 choose the layer you wish to work in by 
 clicking a Layer push button at the bottom of the document window. Click 
 on the name of the tool by the Special Tools palette to jump to see more 
 information.
         
        When you select an element’s handle, Finale 
 displays the relative position of the selected element in the message 
 bar. If you select more than one handle, values are only displayed if 
 they are the same for all the selected elements. When no handles are selected, 
 Finale displays the message for the tool currently selected on the Special 
 Tools Palette.
        
            - Note Position Tool  
. When you click this tool, a handle appears above 
 every note or rest in the measure (except a single default whole rest). 
 You can reposition any note, chord, or rest horizontally by dragging its 
 handle. Note, however, that you’re not actually moving the beat–the notes 
 that fall on this beat in other staves will stay where they are. To move 
 the beat–and the notes in all staves that fall on it–you should use the 
 Measure tool (see Measure tool and 
 Beat positions). 
            - Notehead Position Tool  
. When you click this tool, every notehead in the 
 window sprouts a handle; drag a handle left or right to move a notehead. 
 Because the Notehead Position Tool lets you rearrange the horizontal positions 
 of the individual noteheads, you could use it to move notes in a cluster 
 chord from one side of the stem to another, for example. For more options, 
 right-click 
 on the handle of a notehead and choose Edit to display the Notehead 
 Settings dialog box. In this dialog box, you can enter a precise number 
 for positioning and change the size or shape of the notehead. 
            - Note Shape Tool  
. You can change a notehead’s appearance with the 
 Note Shape Tool by double-clicking its handle. A palette of every symbol 
 in the default music font appears; double-click any shape in this palette 
 to substitute it for the standard oval notehead of the note you clicked. 
 In this way you can create individual X noteheads, diamond noteheads, 
 and so on within a measure of regular notes. This technique is best for 
 occasional notehead shape changes; use the Note Shapes feature from the 
 Staff Attributes dialog box to change all noteheads (of a specific pitch 
 or rhythmic value) to a certain shape. For full measures or regions, use 
 the Change Notehead command in the Selection tool. See Utilities/Change, 
 Staff Attributes dialog box, or Change 
 Noteheads dialog box for more information. For more options, right-click 
 on the handle of a notehead to display the Notehead 
 Settings dialog box. In this dialog box, you can enter a precise number 
 for positioning and change the size or shape of the notehead. 
            - Accidental Tool  
. When you click this tool, every accidental in 
 the measure sprouts a handle. Drag a handle to slide its accidental. This 
 tool can be useful for rearranging the configuration of accidentals on 
 a cluster chord or creating musica ficta, for example. For more options, 
 double-click on the handle to open the Accidental 
 Settings dialog box. In this dialog box, you can enter a precise number 
 for positioning, allow the accidental to be adjusted vertically, and change 
 the size, font or shape of the accidental. 
            - Stem Length Tool  
. When you click this tool, any stemmed note sprouts 
 a handle (unless it’s part of a beamed group). You can drag the handle 
 up or down to change the length of the stem. 
            - Broken Beam Tool  
. This tool can flip a sixteenth-note (or smaller) 
 beam “stub” from one side of its stem to the other. A handle appears on 
 each such broken beam; click the handle to flip the beam to the opposite 
 side of the stem. 
        
        
            
        
        
            - Stem Direction Tool  
. When you click this tool, a handle appears above 
 and below every stemmed note in the measure. A click on a handle flips 
 the stem in that direction. The process is called freezing a stem, because 
 it’s no longer free to flip up or down depending on its position on the 
 staff. 
        
        You can also flip note stems when you’re editing 
 with the Speedy Entry tool: position the insertion bar on a note and press 
 the L key. (Press CTRL+L 
 to restore it to floating, “unfrozen” status.)
        
            - Double/Split Stem Tool  
. When you click this tool, a handle appears on 
 every notehead in the measure; another appears above the staff and one 
 more below. Click the upper or lower handle to create double stemming, 
 like this: 
        
        
            
        
        To create a double stem on a single-stemmed 
 note (top left), click the Double/Split Stem Tool in the Special Tools 
 window (right), and click the handle below the note. The result: a second 
 stem on the other side of the notehead (bottom left).
        The new, second stem points the opposite direction 
 from the original stem, no matter which handle (top or bottom) you clicked.
        The bottom handle has an additional feature. 
 It can produce split stemming within a chord, giving the effect of a separate 
 inner voice, like this.
        
            
        
        There are two steps involved in creating this 
 effect. First, click the bottom stem to let Finale know you want to create 
 split stemming (above left). Then click the handle of each note you want 
 to be a part of the upper stem only (above right).
        For more options, right-click on the handle of a notehead 
 and choose Edit to display the Notehead Settings dialog box. In this dialog 
 box, you can enter a precise number for positioning and change the size 
 or shape of the notehead.
        
            - Reverse Stem Tool  
. This tool flips the stem from one side of its 
 notehead to the other. To reverse a stem, click the handle above or below 
 the note, according to the note’s stem direction. 
        
        You may need this tool when you create cross-staff 
 notation using the Note Mover tool; see Cross-staff 
 notes.
        Note that you can 
 control Finale’s tendency to flip the stem direction of reverse-stemmed 
 notes; for a full explanation, read the description of the RevStem Adj 
 parameter in the Document Options: Stems entry. (Set the Reverse Stem 
 Adjustment parameter to zero if you never want Finale to change stem directions 
 on reverse-stemmed notes.) See Document 
 Options-Stems.
        
            - Custom Stem Tool  
. The Custom Stem Tool provides great flexibility 
 for special stemming cases—such as splayed stemming, where a stem might 
 branch out into three mini-stems connecting the notes of a chord cluster 
 (for example, a Cf/Cn/Cs cluster). In fact, if you double-click a note’s 
 handle, you’ll enter the Shape Selection box, where you can select an 
 existing shape you want to use as a stem. If you then click Create, you 
 enter the Shape Designer, where you can draw 
 any shape for use as a stem—a squiggle, a curve, a box, a letter of the 
 alphabet, or anything you can create in the Shape Designer (see Shape 
 Designer, and bear in mind that the small white circle—the origin—represents 
 the point of the stem’s connection to the note). By entering and exiting 
 the Shape Designer without creating a shape at all, you create a stemless 
 note. 
        
        To restore a normal stem to a custom-stemmed 
 note, click its handle and press BACKSPACE. To modify the shape itself, double-click 
 the handle to re-enter the Shape Designer.
        
            - Beam Angle Tool  
. When you click this tool, any notes that are 
 beamed together sprout two handles, one at each end of the beam. The left 
 handle changes the beam height; as you move it up and down, the right 
 handle moves in tandem, and the beam angle doesn’t change. The right handle 
 changes the beam angle; as you move it up and down, the left handle remains 
 stationary. 
            - Secondary Beam Break Tool  
. This tool lets you specify places where you want 
 secondary beams (for sixteenth-note and smaller values) to break. When 
 you click the tool, a handle appears above each beamed note. Double-click 
 the handle above the note after the desired beam break; the Secondary 
 Beam Break Selection dialog box appears, letting you specify which beams 
 should be broken at the spot you clicked. For a complete discussion, see 
 Secondary Beam Break Selection dialog box. 
            - Beam Extension Tool  
. This tool lets you extend any beam past its last 
 note, which can be useful for beaming across the barline. (To beam across 
 barlines automatically, use the Beam Over Barlines Plug-in). When you 
 click the tool, a handle appears at each end of every beamed group of 
 notes. Double-click the handle at the end you want to extend; the Beam 
 Extension Selection dialog box appears, letting you specify which beams 
 you want extended: eighth-note, sixteenth-note, and so on. For a complete 
 discussion, see Beam Extension Selection dialog 
 box.  
        
        When you return to the document, you can drag 
 the beam handles to the right or left, shortening or lengthening the beams 
 you specified. Click a handle and press DELETE to restore a beam, or double-click 
 a handle to re-enter the Beam Extension Selection dialog box (to specify 
 a different set of beams to modify).
        
            - Secondary Beam Angle Tool  
. This tool allows you to give sixteenth-note (and 
 smaller value) beams different slants—useful for creating the modern feathered 
 beaming notation for accelerandi and ritards, where several secondary 
 beams converge, signifying a gradual change from one rhythmic value to 
 another.  
        
        When you click the tool, handles appear at 
 each end of every beam. The right handle of each beam changes the beam 
 angle; as you move it up and down, the left handle controls the height 
 and the pivot point. By changing the angle of one beam independently of 
 the other (and by using the regular Beam Angle Tool to change the outer 
 [eighth-note] beam’s angle), you can make them appear to converge or diverge.
        
            - Tie Tool  
. Three handles on ties let you adjust their position 
 in relation to noteheads. The first handle appears at the start of the 
 tie, the second handle appears in the middle-left of the tie, the third 
 handle appears at the end of the tie. To adjust the start and end points 
 of the ties, drag the first and last handles respectively. Drag the middle 
 handle to flatten or increase the arc of the tie. If you want to control 
 the left and right sections of your tie separately, double-click on the 
 middle-left handle. A second handle appears in the middle toward the right. 
 These two handles now control the left and right height and inset of the 
 tie, respectively. To return to three handles and symmetrical behavior, 
 double-click the middle-left handle again and the new handle disappears. 
 Also remember that you have control over the vertical placement of ties. 
 If you adjust the vertical placement, both endpoints adjust to maintain 
 the same vertical distance. Remember to take advantage of Finale’s auto-constrain 
 feature (hold down the SHIFT key) if you want to move ties horizontally. 
 Note that the handles will disappear while you are dragging them. 
        
        If you prefer to enter exact values instead 
 of dragging, double-click an ending tie handle and enter new values for 
 the tie in the Tie Alterations dialog box. 
 These values override the global tie placement values you defined in the 
 Document menu.
         
        Note that in cases 
 where a tie straddles a system (line) break, you can also edit the tie’s 
 “tail” on the next line—the miniature tie that represents the continuation 
 of the tie from the previous system. Use the Tie Alterations dialog box 
 settings (or Document Options-Ties for global settings for Tie System 
 Breaks).
        
            - Dot Tool  
. Click this tool if you want to adjust the position 
 of a specific dot on a dotted note; a handle appears on every dotted notehead. 
 When you double-click a handle, the Dot Offsets dialog box appears, where 
 you can specify the precise positioning of this dot. (This tool is best 
 used for making adjustments to specific dotted notes; the default horizontal 
 dot position can be set globally in the Augmentation Dots category of 
 the Document Options.) See Document Options-Augmentation 
 Dots for a more complete discussion. 
        
        There are up to two handles on dotted notes. 
 Drag the first (or only) handle to move the first dot away from or closer 
 to a note. A second handle appears on notes with more than one dot. It 
 appears after the last dot, and controls the space between dots. Drag 
 the second handle to move the last dot away from, or closer to the previous 
 dot. Finale automatically adjusts any dots between the first and the last 
 dot so they are evenly spaced.
        
            - Beam Width Tool  
. Click this tool to adjust the thickness of beams 
 in a beam group. Handles appear at the beginning and end of each beam 
 group. Click and drag or use the arrow keys to change the thickness of 
 all beams in the group. To adjust the thickness of all beams see Document 
 Options-Beams. 
            - Beam Stem Adjust Tool  
. 
 Click this tool to adjust the stem connection to beams. This would allow 
 you to shorten all the stems inside a beam group to only reach the beams 
 closest to the notehead. A handle appears on each stem that ends in a 
 beam. Click and drag or use the arrow keys to move the stem lower or higher 
 in the beam group. 
        
        Tip: Click and drag-select 
 several stems in a beam group to uniformly adjust them at one time.
         
        See Also:
        
        Main Tool 
 Palette
        
        Advanced 
 Tools Palette