How to get there
        Click the Tempo Tool  
. Click a measure, then click Set Swing.
        What it does
        The Tempo Tool offers a method for creating 
 a swing playback feel in your music. You’ll rarely need to use this method, 
 however, because you can use the MIDI Tool much more directly and easily 
 to produce a true swing feel.
        In this dialog box, you can specify the 
 degree of swing you want applied to your music.
        
            - Percent. 
 The number you type in this text box indicates the amount of swing you 
 want. Briefly, the higher the number, the later the second eighth note 
 in a swing pair. (A value of 200 produces perfect, triplet-feel swing.) 
 Because of the method the Tempo Tool uses to create the swing effect, 
 the overall tempo of your piece also drops. Note that you’ll also hear 
 erratic results when Finale attempts to apply Tempo to a triplet. For 
 these reasons, you’ll probably want to use the MIDI Tool (instead of the 
 Tempo Tool) to create a true, quick and easy swing effect that preserves 
 the overall tempo of the piece and plays triplets correctly.
 
        
        Technical note: The 
 Tempo Tool creates swing by actually slowing the tempo while playing the 
 first eighth note of each pair. The number in the Percent box is the reciprocal 
 of the amount by which Finale first slows the tempo. Thus if the value 
 is 200%, the tempo drops to half its speed. If the Percent is 300%, the 
 tempo drops to 1/3 its speed. (The second eighth note is always played 
 at the regular tempo. But because the tempo during the first eighth note 
 was much slower, the effect is that the second eighth note sounds delayed.) 
 The higher the Percent, the more a pair of eighth notes sound like a dotted-eighth-and-sixteenth 
 pair.
        
            - Duration. 
 The number in this text box specifies the durational value of the 
 notes to which you’re applying swing, in EDUs (1024 per quarter note). 
 For standard eighth-note swing, for example, this number should be 512. 
 (This text box is provided in case you want to swing your sixteenth notes, 
 for example, or any other value.) Instead of having to calculate the EDU 
 equivalent for the rhythmic value you want to specify, you can click Duration. 
 Finale displays a palette of note durations; click the one you want to 
 select and click OK.
 
            - OK 
 • Cancel. Click OK to confirm the swing setting you’ve made and 
 return to the Tempo Adjustment dialog box, where Finale has filled in 
 the text boxes according to your swing specifications. Cancel tells Finale 
 to ignore any changes you made to the swing setting. You return to the 
 Tempo Adjustment dialog box.
 
        
        Tip: An easier method 
 to add swing can be found in the Playback Controls 
 or the Expression Tool.
         
        Tip: The higher the 
 number, the later the second note in a swing pair and the heavier the 
 swing.
         
        See Also:
        
        MIDI Tool 
        
        Tempo Tool