Re: Finale update
Posted: 19 Oct 2018, 13:47
As for the upgrade itself: increased speed and improvements in automatic placement and avoidance is to be welcomed. But there is still so much for MM to address.
So many long-standing bugs and limitations in notation and positioning -- colliding notes; beam over barlines is still a 'work around'; tuplet bugs, 12/8 rests, etc.
The frame limit of a document. For large projects, which are much more likely on today's powerful hardware, this is a major barrier.
The lack of any vertical spacing or collision avoidance.
Finale's 'blindness' to notation: e.g. Fermata's still can't be put on whole bar rests; and must be applied manually to every staff.
The clunky interface.
It may be impossible for Finale to make significant advances without changing the app so much that it upsets people who have become so used to its ways, or who still need to open legacy files with accuracy.
Most of all, I just can't shake the idea that Finale is held together by string and brown paper, and that if it coughs too hard it might rupture itself.
Perhaps I'd be prepared to put up with all of its faults, as I have done for so many years, if there weren't alternatives that show how it can be done.
So many long-standing bugs and limitations in notation and positioning -- colliding notes; beam over barlines is still a 'work around'; tuplet bugs, 12/8 rests, etc.
The frame limit of a document. For large projects, which are much more likely on today's powerful hardware, this is a major barrier.
The lack of any vertical spacing or collision avoidance.
Finale's 'blindness' to notation: e.g. Fermata's still can't be put on whole bar rests; and must be applied manually to every staff.
The clunky interface.
It may be impossible for Finale to make significant advances without changing the app so much that it upsets people who have become so used to its ways, or who still need to open legacy files with accuracy.
Most of all, I just can't shake the idea that Finale is held together by string and brown paper, and that if it coughs too hard it might rupture itself.
Perhaps I'd be prepared to put up with all of its faults, as I have done for so many years, if there weren't alternatives that show how it can be done.