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The vertical placement of ties is also automatically adjusted in Dorico Elements so that neither of
the end points of ties, nor the apex of tie curves, starts or ends on a staff line. If this happens, it
can cause the shape of ties to appear distorted, which makes the music harder to read.
To avoid this, Dorico Elements changes the vertical position of ties slightly, and makes small
changes to the curvature of ties. These changes are small, but the placement of ties is subtly
different depending on the position of notes relative to staff lines.
A tie outside noteheads When transposed one note down, the tie appears
with a steeper curve to avoid reaching its apex on
the staff line.
A tie between noteheads, with the ends slightly
above the vertical center of the noteheads to avoid
the tie appearing too close to the staff line at its
ends or apex.
When transposed up, the ends of the tie are now
positioned at the vertical center of the notehead, as
there is no staff line with which it could collide.
Wherever possible, clef changes should not be positioned in the middle of tie chains. Changing
the clef changes the position of the tied note on the staff, which could easily cause a performer
to misread the tie as a slur and play two different notes.
Ties can look distorted when they are very short, and can be overlooked.
NOTE
Slurs must not be confused with ties, which look supercially similar, but instead join notes of
the same pitch to indicate that they are played as a single note. In that sense, ties are part of
rhythmic notation, while slurs are considered articulation.
RELATED LINKS
Ties vs. slurs on page 940
Inputting ties on page 189
General placement conventions for clefs on page 617
Ties vs. slurs
Ties and slurs look supercially similar but differ in meaning.
Ties indicate that a note should not be re-struck. They are used to join notes of the same pitch
together. For example, ties can be used to extend notes across multiple bars. Although multiple
notes can be included in a single tie chain, each tie in the chain only joins one notehead to the
next notehead on the staff.
Articulations on tied notes only affect the attack at the start of the tie chain and the release at the
end of the tie chain.
Ties
Ties vs. slurs
940
Dorico Elements 3.5.12