You can also change Tuplets over a region.
Instead of selecting the Tuplet Tool, select the Selection Tool and choose
Change Tuplets from the Change submenu of the Utilities Menu. The settings
in the Change Tuplets dialog box are the same as in the Tuplet Definition
dialog box.
You can also create tuplets during entry
with the Simple and Speedy Entry Tools. See Tuplets
(Simple Entry) and Speedy
Entry.
To
turn “normal” notes into a tuplet group
- Click the Tuplet Tool .
- Click
the first note to be included in the tuplet group. The Tuplet Definition
dialog box appears.
- Specify the rhythmic composition of the tuplet.
On the top part of the screen Finale is asking, “How many notes
of what rhythmic value are to fit in the space normally allotted to how
many of what value?” Enter the number of each rhythmic value in the text
boxes. Specify the rhythmic value itself by selecting the rhythmic-value
from the popup
menu.
For example, to define a standard quarter
note triplet, you could fill out the values either as “3 (quarters) in
the space of 2 (quarters),” or “3 (quarters) in the space of 1 (half).”
- Specify the visual appearance of the tuplet.
Finale lets you specify various aspects governing the visual appearance
of your tuplets. See Tuplet
Definition dialog box. You can always change the angle or position
of the bracket or slur once it’s in the score. If you want the “3” (or
whatever number appears over the tuplet) to appear in the middle of the
slur or bracket (if you’re using one) instead of being above or below
it, be sure to choose Break Slur/Bracket. If you’re creating a complex
tuplet, you can also choose Use Ratio for Number; instead of placing a
simple digit above the tuplet (like 3, for example), Finale will express
the tuplet as a ratio (such as 3:2, using the numbers you entered in the
__ in the space of __ text boxes).
- Click OK (or press return).
To adjust,
move, or delete a tuplet
- Click the Tuplet Tool ; then click the first
note of the tuplet. Handles appear on the tuplet’s bracket (or
slur, or number).
- To reposition the entire tuplet, drag the main
handle (which is unshaded).
- To change the length of the hook, drag the
left or right hook handle. If you selected Match Length of Hooks
in the Tuplet Definition dialog box, Finale automatically adjusts the
other hook to the same length as you drag.
- To move the shape closer to or away from the
notes, drag the shape handle up or down.
- To change the angle of the shape, drag the
slope handle.
- To move the number closer to or away from the
notes, drag the number handle.
- To delete the tuplet definition (and restore
the notes to “normal”), click any handle and press delete.
To enter tuplets with the Simple Entry Tool
- Click the Simple Entry Tool . The Simple Entry
Palettes appear.
- Click the icon representing the desired note’s
duration. Click any accidental tools, if desired.
- Click the Simple Tuplet Tool on the Simple Entry
Palette.
- Click the staff. A note appears where
you clicked with rests filling out the rest of the triplet. By default,
the triplet will use the duration of the first note to define the triplet.
If there isn’t enough room to create the full tuplet or you click within
an already existing tuplet, Finale will enter a note of the duration you
selected.
- While entering with the Simple Entry Caret,
press 9 (or numpad 9) to begin a tuplet.
To enter tuplets with the Speedy Entry
Tool
- Click the Speedy Entry Tool , and click the measure
in question. The editing frame appears.
- If MIDI is not being used, place the cursor
on the correct pitch.
- Press option-number in the number keypad.
You can press any number between 2 and 8 to specify the tuplet
value that you’re about to enter. When you do so, the number you pressed
appears in the upper right corner of the editing frame, telling you that
Finale is ready to group the next notes you enter as a tuplet defined
by that number. If you need to enter a more complex tuplet (or want to
specify a particular bracket or slur configuration), press option–1, and the Tuplet Definition
dialog box will appear (see Tuplet
Definition dialog box).
- Enter the notes of the tuplet. The value
of the first note you enter tells Finale whether you’re entering an eighth-note
tuplet, quarter-note tuplet, and so on. Finale automatically groups them
and brackets them according to the default visual tuplet settings (see
“To predefine the
appearance of tuplets,” below). To enter many tuplets in a row, see To
enter many notes of the same value (hands-free MIDI method).
To
create a nested tuplet
To nest tuplets, simply create one, then
the other, as described in “To turn ‘normal’ notes
into a tuplet group,” above. It makes no difference whether you create
the outer or inner tuplet first.
To transcribe
tuplets from a real-time performance
For full instructions on the use of Finale’s
real-time transcription tool, HyperScribe, see Recording
with HyperScribe and Transcribing
a sequence.
However, you may find these supplementary instructions helpful.
- Choose Quantization Settings from the MIDI
Menu. If you’ve just recorded a performance in the Transcription
Mode, choose Quant Settings from the Transcription window. These settings
are used when importing a MIDI file, and transcribing with the HyperScribe
Tool.
- Select your smallest note duration.
If you will be playing nothing smaller than eighth note triplets, choose
the sixteenth note.
Tip: If your real-time
transcriptions consistently transcribe durations that are too large, lower
the smallest note duration, or choose More Settings from the Quantization
Settings dialog box. Place a check beside Sensitivity and choose the next
smallest duration to your smallest note duration. For example, if your
smallest note duration is a sixteenth note, set Sensitivity to a thirty-second
note.
- Click either Mixed Rhythms or Space Notes Evenly.
If your music will have a combination of dotted rhythms and tuplets, choose
the former. If your music will have only tuplets and evenly spaced rhythms,
choose the later.
- Click OK (or press return).
Continue with the transcription in the usual way.
To
predefine the appearance of tuplets
If you create tuplets with any of the methods
described above, you don’t have to redefine the visual appearance of each
tuplet each time you create one. Instead, you can set the visual appearance—including
whether or not to include a slur, bracket, and so on—in advance. See Document Options-Tuplets.