User manual

Table Of Contents
Transposed pitch
When music is in transposed pitch, the notes written are the ones each instrument
must play in order to produce the desired sounding pitch. For example, if a clarinet in
B reads a D in transposed pitch, the pitch that sounds from the instrument is C.
Transposing scores and parts also transpose key signatures according to the transposition of the
instrument.
RELATED LINKS
Transposing key signatures alongside selections on page 697
Enharmonic equivalent key signatures on page 698
Clefs with octave indicators on page 621
Sorting layouts
You can change the order in which layouts appear in the Layouts panel and the layout selector,
for example, if you added a custom score layout and want it to be positioned at the top next to
the full score layout.
PROCEDURE
1. In the Layouts panel, click and drag a layout card to a different position.
An insertion line indicates where the players will be positioned.
2. Release the mouse.
RESULT
The layout is inserted at the selected position.
RELATED LINKS
Layouts panel (Setup mode) on page 85
Renumbering layouts
You can renumber all the layouts in their project according to their current position in the
Layouts panel in Setup mode, for example, after you have dragged layouts to different positions.
PROCEDURE
In the Layouts panel, right-click any layout card and choose Renumber Layouts from the
context menu.
RESULT
All layouts are renumbered according to their current position in the panel. Full score layouts,
custom score layouts, and part layouts are all numbered separately.
Deleting layouts
You can delete any layout from the project, for example, if you only want to use a combined
Violin I and II part, you can delete their separate parts. Deleting layouts does not delete any
music from the project.
PROCEDURE
1.
In the Layouts panel, select the layouts that you want to delete.
Setup mode
Layouts
128
Dorico Elements 3.5.12