

Note when pasting into System Text expressions such as Tempo: make sure that the font being used is the Category’s Text Font and not its Music Font, which doesn’t contain the fraction characters. When the dialog opens, paste the contents of your clipboard into the Text field. “Techniques” and click the “Create Technique Text” button. (To make these fractions available in any score, start with a “New Document Without Libraries”, which will allow you to export the fractions as a unique library later. In Finale 2012 or later, select and open the Expression Tool in your score by double clicking. To get started, double-click one of the fractions below to highlight it (or click and drag-select), then copy it to your clipboard: It just takes a couple of minutes to set up, and from then on, they’ll always be there when you need them. The good news is that with Unicode support, you now can simply copy and paste these characters into your music, and recall them again quickly at any time.

Unfortunately, there are no designated keystrokes for fractions on a Mac, and if you are like me, you may have trouble remembering obscure ALT codes, anyway.
Insert fractions into word doc code#
To insert the symbol ½, use the character code 0189. Hold down the ALT key, type 0188 on the numeric keypad, and then release the ALT key to insert the symbol ¼. On the PC, you should be able to type the most common fractions directly into either Sibelius 7 or later or Finale 2012 or later using ALT codes. Directives such as “½ section trem.” or “Slow ¼ tone bends” or “trill ½” appear frequently in modern scores, for instance, so it is great to finally be able to display these properly and easily in both Finale and Sibelius. Without Unicode, fractions need to be displayed as two numbers with a slash between them, e.g. One useful type of symbol sometimes used in music scores not built in to the Sibelius Word Menus or the Finale Expressions Selection Dialog in Finale are fractions. This cross – application Unicode support represents an important step for digital music preparation, as we not only have access to the comprehensive set of accented and diacritical characters used in Latin based languages, but we can now enter the text and symbols for titles, credits, lyrics and directives in non-Latin based languages such as Russian and Chinese. Among other things, this means a number of new symbols useful for music notation are now readily available in addition to the 256 “regular” characters we’ve always had access to. More recent versions of Finale and Sibelius both feature Unicode font support. An international encoding standard for use with different languages and scripts, by which each letter, digit, or symbol is assigned a unique numeric value that applies across different platforms and programs.
