Communications of the ACM
Music—a language for typesetting music scores
Software—Practice & Experience
Finished musical scores from the keyboard: An expansion of the composer's creativity
ACM '83 Proceedings of the 1983 annual conference on Computers : Extending the human resource
Using Diagram Generation Software to Improve Diagram Recognition: A Case Study of Music Notation
IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence
Cooperative visual manipulation of music notation
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI)
Creating Printed Music Automatically
Computer
Computer
Automatic justification and line-breaking of music sheets
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Calculemus '09/MKM '09 Proceedings of the 16th Symposium, 8th International Conference. Held as Part of CICM '09 on Intelligent Computer Mathematics
Hi-index | 48.22 |
There is increasing interest in the use of computer systems for editing and printing sheet music [3, 19]. Music processing lags far behind text processing because of the complexities of music notation. Most music published today is still laid out by hand; while computers may be used, decisions about music-symbol placement are made by people. Much research remains to be done into computational methods of encoding the myriad rules of music notation. Individual rules are not difficult to formulate; it is the complex interaction among rules which is difficult to describe and control. In this article we focus on one aspect of music notation: the horizontal spacing of music to produce a right- and left- justified result.