User manual

Table Of Contents
RELATED LINKS
Layouts panel (Setup mode) on page 85
Flows panel on page 87
Making layouts transposing/concert pitch
You can change whether each layout in your project is transposing or concert pitch. In Dorico
Elements, full score layouts are concert pitch and part layouts are transposing by default.
For example, full scores are often concert pitch, to show notes at their sounding pitch, but part
layouts are transposing so the player can read the notes they must play in order to achieve the
desired sounding pitch.
PROCEDURE
1.
Press Ctrl/Cmd-Shift-L to open Layout Options.
2.
In the Layouts list, select the layouts you want to make transposing/non-transposing.
By default, the layout currently open in the music area is selected when you open the dialog.
You can select other layouts by using the selection options in the action bar,
Shift -clicking
adjacent layouts, and Ctrl/Cmd -clicking individual layouts.
3. Click Players in the category list.
4. In the Players section, activate/deactivate Transposing layout.
5. Click Apply, then Close.
RESULT
The selected layouts are transposed pitch when Transposing layout is activated, and concert
pitch when it is deactivated.
TIP
You can also make layouts transposing by choosing Edit > Transposed Pitch, and concert pitch
by choosing
Edit > Concert Pitch. This automatically updates the layout option but only for the
layout currently open in the music area.
RELATED LINKS
Transposing instruments on page 104
Transposing selections on page 202
Setting different clefs for concert/transposed pitch on page 619
Hiding/Showing clefs according to layout transpositions on page 619
Concert vs. transposed pitch
Layouts in Dorico Elements can use concert or transposed pitch. This affects the pitches and key
signatures on staves belonging to transposing instruments.
Concert pitch
When music is in concert pitch, all notes are written as they sound. This means that
players with transposing instruments reading music in concert pitch must transpose
the music themselves. For example, if a clarinet in B
reads a C in concert pitch, they
must play the note D on their instrument to produce the sounding note C.
Setup mode
Layouts
127
Dorico Elements 3.5.12