Measure number settings can only conflict with each other if an enclosure is defined for either Show Measure Numbers at Start of Staff System or Show on Every _ Measures Beginning with Measure _, Show On Multimeasure Rests is checked, and the number is defined to appear on a measure beginning a multimeasure rest. In this case, Finale displays both the enclosed measure number and the multimeasure rest number/number range. To hide one or the other, right/CONTROL-click the measure number's handle and choose Always Hide Number.
If you want measure numbers to occur only at specific places in the score to serve as rehearsal letters or numbers, see Rehearsal letters. For information regarding measure numbers in scores with linked parts, see Measure numbers in linked parts.
Enclosures can be added individually to existing measure numbers in a document. By using these steps, enclosures can also be edited independent of parameters set in the Measure Number dialog box. They can also be removed by using the Enclosure Designer dialog box.
Measure number settings can only conflict with each other if an enclosure is defined for either Show Measure Numbers at Start of Staff System or Show Every _ Measures Beginning with Measure _, Show On Multimeasure Rests is checked, and the number is defined to appear on a measure beginning a multimeasure rest. In this case, Finale displays both the enclosed measure number and the multimeasure rest number/number range. To hide one or the other, right-click the measure number's handle and choose Always Hide Number.
The Measure Number dialog box offers two ways of creating enclosures around measure numbers. If you select an Enclosure and then click Every Number, Finale places an enclosure around every number in the region. If you select an Enclosure and then click Selected Numbers in the Measure Number dialog box, you add enclosures to one number at a time in the score, by double-clicking its handle and then clicking OK. You can both resize and remove an individual enclosure of this type.
I was just working as a proofreader on a recording project, and the cue I was looking at was supposed to start with measure 6. I noticed that it was starting at measure 1, and (figuring that the copyist had simply overlooked it) went to set the Measure Number Region accordingly. I was surprised to see that the measure number region had in fact been set properly, but for some reason was not updating:
In the Final Rolls for Indians by blood, you will find the person's name, age, sex, blood degree, and census card number. For Freedmen, you'll find the person's name, age, sex, and census card number (no blood degree).
This is a bit of a long how-to video to help you understand how to achieve several different common looks for measure numbers in your scores and parts. Feel free to skip ahead to a particular style to see how I recreated them from scratch.
This request comes from Mike Ruckles who is wondering if I can come up with a good way to create the little arrows that often can be found before a measure number when there are skipped numbers. The most obvious solution is to use an Expression, but I think I came up with a better solution for this that avoids all the headaches that using an Expression for this would cause.
Everyone knew the Game of Thrones finale Sunday night would set records for HBO in viewership, despite the loud screams of dissatisfaction from fans of the show over its creative direction in season 8.
"Cause and Effect" is the 16th episode and the season finale of the sixth season and series finale of the American television series Numbers. In the episode, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents and mathematicians attempt to find one agent's gun before it is used in a violent crime. When series creators/executive producers Cheryl Heuton and Nicolas Falacci learned that the number of episodes airing during the season was reduced, they felt that they needed to finish storylines in case the series was cancelled. To do so, they wrote an open-ended story to serve as either a season finale or a series finale.
Originally set to air in May, and February, "Cause and Effect" first aired in the United States on March 12, 2010. Critics mostly focused on the potential cancellation of the series, but two reviewers gave the episode reviews. "Cause and Effect" became the Numb3rs series finale after CBS's cancellation of the series on May 18, 2010.
Citing a decrease in ratings, CBS reduced Numb3rs' episode order, the number of episodes airing per season, from 22 to 16 on November 4, 2009.[4] Although the series had high ratings for the night, the 18-49 demographic was not as strong.[5] CBS also wanted to air a series during the middle of the season.[4][6][7]
For the cast and crew, the announcement about the reduction in the episode order came during the production of the eleventh episode of the sixth season.[5] Series creators/executive producers Cheryl Heuton and Nicolas Falacci, who wrote "Cause and Effect", developed the episode to be a season finale that could also serve as a series finale in case the show was cancelled.[8] They decided to write the episode in a way in which fans would see some kind of resolution of storylines in the event that the series was cancelled.[5] They included some closure to several storylines, especially David's storyline[9] and to one of Don's storylines.[10]
Although network executives originally scheduled the episode to air in May[5] and then in February,[12] they scheduled "Cause and Effect" to air on March 12, 2010.[5] Over 8.34 million people in the United States watched "Cause and Effect", making it the 101st most watched series finale of all time.[13] Critically, the television critics focused on the idea of the episode being a series finale, but several critics commented on the episode. Rob Owen, a television critic with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, stated, "Kudos to them [the producers of Numb3rs] for rewarding long-time fans by crafting the season finale to also function as a series finale."[14] Matt Roush of TV Guide Magazine's web site was surprised by the amount of closure in the episode.[15] David Johnson, a reviewer for DVD Verdict, felt that the episode was excellent.[16]
When CBS executives made the announcement about the order cut, CBS executives cautioned that it was too early to know whether Numb3rs would be cancelled.[7] When asked about the fate of Numb3rs, CBS executive Nina Tassler stated that executives cut the order for Numb3rs to air Miami Medical, which was scheduled to air midseason.[17][18] Television critics expected Numb3rs to end at the end of the 2009-2010 television season.[19][20] Citing a decline in ratings[21] and a need to debut new series,[22] CBS announced on May 18, 2010, that Numb3rs was cancelled,[21][23] making "Cause and Effect" the series finale.
If a staff is not needed for a whole cue, I will hide it. I never delete them, as I may need to add something later or insert the cue into another one, so it is important that each score has the same number of staves, even if some are hidden. My scores also contain the sketch, which I do not want to show in page view. The solution is another staff style that forces the staff to hide, even when it has notes.
I do not like the look of the other program. The default settings have a few really silly things in them and most people leave them. For example the parenthesized cautionary accidentals it puts on tied notes over system breaks and magnetic layout can screw up and move things to the wrong place. Finale can look bad too, but it is way more flexible.
I started with finale and have never used the other one, have not felt the need.
Hi Tim, that was the first thing I tried, but hides the whole name, including the number. Were do you use the short cut? When you click on the staff name on the score or in the score manager? Thanks for your time.
Highlight just the part of the text you want to hide (in this case the instrument name itself, not the number) while in the staff attribute dialog, while editing the full staff name and abbreviated staff name. Then press ctrl+h or cmd+h in mac while highlighting the instrument name, but NOT highlighting the instrument number. This leaves the name in for the copyist, but leaves the name out for the printed score.
Been working through a few of these. Some taking me ages to do, mainly creating + naming the groups then renaming the individual instruments to have hidden text but visible number. Any advice for how to speed this up?
9 admits to being from a completely different universe with more intelligent beings. It cuts to a fight beginning between 7 and the rest of the numbers. 3 begins the fight by attacking 7 and 4 attempts to attack 3. 4 successfully injures the number, resulting in 1 and 2 wanting revenge. 9 has a secret talk with 10, as they talk about the events that unfolded and 10 mentions that 9 didn't do what he wanted him to do. This is followed by 9 revealing to the other numbers that they are being controlled by Delta and Square Root.
Some paragraph numbers and references have been updated in the final pronouncement (issued April 11) to reflect revisions to the Code arising from the Definitions of Listed Entity and Public Interest Entity, and Definition of Engagement Team and Group Audits pronouncements. The list of changes reflected in updated final pronouncement (published on May 30) is set out in the table below:
Second: Spouses and Children, and Unmarried Sons and Daughters of Permanent Residents: 114,200, plus the number (if any) by which the worldwide family preference level exceeds 226,000, plus any unused first preference numbers:
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