User talk:Peter Gibson: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Sibelius7: thanks!)
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:Just to add to the fun, Sibelius for Win/Mac versions 1.1 to 4 can import !Sibelius7, later versions cannot (AFAIK).
:Just to add to the fun, Sibelius for Win/Mac versions 1.1 to 4 can import !Sibelius7, later versions cannot (AFAIK).
:[[User:Peter Gibson|Peter Gibson]] 13:33, 8 March 2012 (CST)
:[[User:Peter Gibson|Peter Gibson]] 13:33, 8 March 2012 (CST)
::Peter, thank you for this thorough explanation! Would you mind if part of it were added to [[ChoralWiki:Sibelius]] so others may learn about the differences? (or, if you feel like doing it yourself, please go ahead! :) —[[User:Carlos|Carlos]] [{{fullurl:User talk:Carlos}} {{mail}}] 12:19, 9 March 2012 (CST)

Revision as of 18:19, 9 March 2012

Alan Gray Nunc dimittis

Hi. I think you've made a slight mistake in your version of Alan Gray's Nunc dimittis. I've just followed your score whilst listening to it being sung on the BBC's Choral Evensong on Radio 3, and in bar 151, the Can treble line sings "For mine" to the notes C and Db, rather than the two C's you've written. In the organ part it has C and Db as well. DTOx 02:22, 21 December 2006 (PST)

Sibelius7

Hi Peter, I noticed that you've been writing !Sibelius7 (with an exclamation mark). What exactly does that mean? :) —Carlos Email.gif 00:07, 8 March 2012 (CST)

This all boils down to ancient (computer) history. When the brothers Ben & Jonathan Finn started writing their score notation program (named after a more famous Finn: Sibelius), they chose to write for Acorn's RISC OS operating system. On that system the application directory name is always prefixed by a !, thus instructing the OS how to handle that object (that is, run it). Accordingly, after several updates Sibelius 7 was released. They then moved platform to Windows (and Mac Os later in parallel) starting with Sibelius.
So far, so easy; until further updates saw the recent release of Sibelius 7 for Windows / Mac Os, leading to the need to distinguish between the old Acorn Sibelius 7, and the new Sibelius 7 for Win/Mac.
As all my source files are Acorn Sibelius 7, I chose to differentiate by using the RISC OS application name convention; anyone familiar with RISC OS should recognise that immediately.
Just to add to the fun, Sibelius for Win/Mac versions 1.1 to 4 can import !Sibelius7, later versions cannot (AFAIK).
Peter Gibson 13:33, 8 March 2012 (CST)
Peter, thank you for this thorough explanation! Would you mind if part of it were added to ChoralWiki:Sibelius so others may learn about the differences? (or, if you feel like doing it yourself, please go ahead! :) —Carlos Email.gif 12:19, 9 March 2012 (CST)