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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

MusiXTeX
Developer(s)Jean-Pierre Coulon, Hiroaki Morimoto, Don Simons, Bob Tennent, Olivier Vogel, Andreas Egler (inactive), Ross Mitchell (inactive), Daniel Taupin (deceased)
Stable release
1.38 / 29 March 2024; 55 days ago (2024-03-29)[1]
Repositorynone Edit this at Wikidata
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeScorewriter
LicenseGPL-2.0-or-later
Websitectan.org/pkg/musixtex

MusiXTeX is a suite of open source music engraving macros and fonts that allow music typesetting in TeX, released under the GPL-2.0-or-later license.[1]

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Transcription

History

Macros for typesetting music in TeX first appeared in 1987 (MuTeX) and were limited to one-staff systems.

In 1991, Daniel Taupin[2] created MusicTeX, whose macros allowed the production of systems with multiple staves, but which presented a few problems in controlling the horizontal positioning of notes. MusicTeX used a one-pass compilation.

In 1997 the positioning problems were corrected in MusiXTeX, which includes the external application musixflx to control the horizontal distances. This new module requires a three-pass compilation: TeX, musixflx and TeX again. MusiXTeX requires ghostscript.

Three-pass system

When compiling a TeX source file named file.tex, a file.mx1 is generated, containing information about the distances between staves and bar lengths. This file is processed by the program musixflx, which determines the distances between notes for each beat and writes them in file.mx2, which is used in compiling the final TeX file. Any changes in the score that affect the horizontal distances require file.mx2 to be deleted and all three passes to be performed again; otherwise, only one compilation in TeX is required.

Spin-offs

In 1996, Han-Wen Nienhuys and Jan Nieuwenhuizen, who were working in the MusiXTeX PreProcessor (MPP) project since the previous year, decided to create a new music engraving program loosely based on MusiXTeX's concepts, named LilyPond.[3][4] LilyPond 1.0 was released on 31 July 1998, highlighting the development of a custom music font, Feta, and the complete separation of LilyPond from MusiXTeX.[5]

PMX is a preprocessor for MusiXTeX written by Don Simons.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "MusiXTEX – Sophisticated music typesetting". ctan.org. Retrieved 2024-03-30.
  2. ^ "Daniel Taupin 1936-2003". icking-music-archive.org.
  3. ^ "GNU LilyPond Learning Manual: Preface". Retrieved 2010-02-16.
  4. ^ "MusiXTeX PreProcessor README". GitHub. Retrieved 2010-03-31.
  5. ^ Nienhuys, Han-Wen (1998-07-31). "GNU LilyPond 1.0 released". gnu-music-discuss (Mailing list). Retrieved 2010-02-16.
  6. ^ "PMX – a Preprocessor for MusiXTEX" (PDF). icking-music-archive.org.

External links


This page was last edited on 30 March 2024, at 08:56
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