
The A-G pattern repeats continually-the note above "G" is always another "A". Moving vertically upwards, the letter names proceed alphabetically with the alternating lines and spaces, and represent ascending pitches. Each line or space indicates the pitch belonging to a note with a letter name: A, B, C, D, E, F, G. The five-line staff (often "stave" in British usage) is used to indicate pitch. There are symbols to communicate information about many musical elements, including pitch, duration, dynamics, or articulation of musical notes tempo, metre, form (e.g., whether sections are repeated), and details about specific playing techniques (e.g., which fingers, keys, or pedals are to be used, whether a string instrument should be bowed or plucked, or whether the bow of a string instrument should move up or down). Musical symbols are marks and symbols in musical notation that indicate various aspects of how a piece of music is to be performed.


MuseScore, one click to paste it into Word.For the use of musical symbols on Wikipedia, see Help:Musical symbols. Either way, it's one click to get the image from. And there are niceties like an automatic size of the region to the visible area of the page, also a "copy with link" feature to include a link back to the score so you can edit your example just by clicking it in your Word processor (no idea if your version of Word supports that, but LibreOffice does). if you're making the staff lines invisible already via Staff Propeties, then that's exactly what the Image Capture tool captures. Otherwise, you need to enter the glyphs by their codepoint number - look up SMuFL to find a full list of standard music font codepoints.īut, nothing about what you're describing should make the image capture less useful. If Word has a "master palette" and that's what you've been using so far, then it should still work.

I'm sure whow you are finding the characters you are already using, but I assume you can find the precomposed notes the same way - they are all just characters in the font, none more special than others.

And I get being pigheaded and wanting to see what's possible, so by all means, knock yourself out.
