![]() ![]() Īs shown in the following PDF file, this continues to work on the second page. This worked nicely, so the next step was to switch from "Continuous" view to "Pages Down" view, which also worked nicely as shown in the PDF and the following image. Specifically, I created a new NOTION score and switched to "Continuous" view, where I then added a bunch of stacked Text fields to each of quite a few measures. īased on the presumption there is a way to put a lot of text between staves, the "thinking like a software engineer" aspect in this instance mostly is a matter of trying to do it in a way which makes little if any intuitive sense to so-called "normal" people, those folks who are not software engineers. There probably also are low-level C and assembly language code sections, but the OOPS aspects are most interesting when one wants to do something which (a) is logical, (b) should be supported, but (c) is not so obvious with respect to how actually to do it. Īs best as I can determine, NOTION is programed in part using classes and an object-oriented programming system (OOPS). ![]() Sometimes it's useful to think like a software engineer.
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