User manual

Table Of Contents
Rehearsal marks
Rehearsal marks are an ordered sequence of letters or numbers, which along with bar numbers,
provide a reference point for music that has multiple players, and make the chronological
sequence of the music clear.
They tell performers where they are in the piece, and allow performers to orient and co-ordinate
themselves easily in rehearsals and concerts. Rehearsal marks can also be used to indicate
signicant changes in the music, and you can freely decide their positions.
In Dorico Elements, rehearsal marks follow an automatic sequence where each rehearsal mark
has a unique index, ensuring there are never duplicate rehearsal marks.
A rehearsal mark, showing the letter G
By default, rehearsal marks in Dorico Elements appear as letters, but you can change the
sequence type to show letters, numbers, or bar numbers. You can use all three available
rehearsal mark sequences simultaneously.
In order to ensure they are easily noticeable, and cannot be confused with bar numbers when
using numbers for rehearsal marks, rehearsal marks are shown in a rectangular enclosure.
In Dorico Elements, rehearsal marks are categorized as system objects. Therefore, rehearsal
marks follow your per-layout settings for the visibility and positioning of system objects, which
you can change on the
Staves and Systems page in Setup > Layout Options.
RELATED LINKS
Inputting rehearsal marks on page 317
Changing the index of rehearsal marks on page 841
Changing the rehearsal mark sequence type on page 842
System objects on page 913
Changing the positions of system objects on page 913
Tempo marks on page 926
Positions of rehearsal marks
Rehearsal marks are placed outside the music, above the staff, and at the same positions as
other system objects so they can be seen easily.
By default, rehearsal marks are positioned above barlines and to the right of clefs or key
signatures at the start of systems. Although you can input rehearsal marks at rhythmic positions
within a bar in
Dorico Elements, this is not common practice.
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Dorico Elements 3.5.12