Frequently Asked Question List for TeX
The current best bet for music typesetting is to use
musixtex
. Musixtex
is a three-pass system that
has a TeX-based pass, a processing pass and then a further TeX
pass. The middle pass, a program called musixflx
,
optimises the spacing and sorts out slurs and ties.
Musixtex
is demanding of TeX resources, and any
significant score requires that typesetting is done using ε-TeX,
whose expanded variable- and box-register ranges allow for more of the
“parallel” activities that abound in a music score.
Of course, musixtex
also requires music fonts; those are
available in a separate package on the archive.
Musixtex
requires pretty arcane input; most people using it
actually prepare (less obscure) input for pmx
, whose output
is TeX input suitable for musixtex
.
A further preprocessor, M-Tx
, allows preparation of music
with lyrics; M-Tx
s output is fed into pmx
, and
thence to musixtex
.
An alternative path to music examples within a (La)TeX document is
Lilypond
.
Lilypond
is (at heart) a batch music typesetting system
with plain text input that does most of its work without TeX.
Lilypond
s input syntax is less cryptic than is
MusiXTeX’s, though similar quality is achieved. The
lilypond
FAQ mentions programs
with graphical user interfaces, that export lilypond output.
For occasional music references (sharp and flat signs, notes, clefs
and so on, there is a (LaTeX) package (with associated font) called
lilyglyphs
. This uses lilypond
s fonts (which
are included in the package), and also provides the means to add stuff
from other sources.
Another alternative in the production of music is the ABC
notation, which was developed to notate the traditional music of
Western Europe (which can be written on a single stave), though it can
be used much more widely. A front end to musictex
(see
below), abc2mtex
, makes ABC typesetting possible.
The program midi2tex
can also generate musictex
output, from MIDI files.
The history of music in TeX goes back some time; the earliest “working” macros were MuTeX, by Angelika Schofer and Andrea Steinbach. MuTeX was very limited, but it was some time before Daniel Taupin took up the baton, and developed MusicTeX, which allows the typesetting of polyphonic and other multiple-stave music; MusicTeX remains available, but is no longer recommended.
Once Andreas Egler had withdrawn (his last version of
musixtex
is preserved on the archive), Daniel Taupin took up
the development, leading to the musixtex
used today.
For Gregorion chant there is gregoriotex is a software application for engraving Gregorian chant scores.
FAQ ID: Q-music