Sharing Finale Files

by Scott Yoho 8. October 2009 04:51

If you have Finale 2010, you are essentially a superhero. You can leap tall buildings in a single bound AND open up Finale files created in all current and past versions of any Finale-family music notation program. On the other hand, let's say you're collaborating with someone using Finale 2007: Finale 2007 can't directly open the Finale files you save. What does a caped crusader like you do in the face of such a dilemma?

You might use MusicXML.

MusicXML is a file format, created so that musicians using a variety of software packages could all communicate. Huh? If you're familiar with saving and opening MIDI files, MusicXML files work much the same way, but better.  Users of Finale 2010 can save their scores as MusicXML files and anyone using Finale 2003 or newer can open them. Best of all, it's easy to do:

  1. While viewing the music you wish to share in Finale 2010, go to the File menu and choose MusicXML>Export
  2. Give the file a name (let's call it KRYPTON.XML) and note where you save it
  3. In Finale 2007, go to the File menu, choose MusicXML>Import, and select the file (in this example KRYPTON.XML)

It's that easy. Your Finale 2007-using friend can now make any changes they wish to your piece, and simply save the results as a Finale file to send back to you.

In the interest of full disclosure, there are a few caveats. Features not found in earlier versions (Linked Parts come to mind) are not supported, which means they won't appear when you reopen the 2007-saved file.  Similarly, if you've configured fancy sounds to play back, this may not transfer back and forth. My rule of thumb is this: If you're working on collaborating on what the notes should be, and aren't working on final layout or playback, MusicXML can be a lifesaver. 

But what if you are working on final layout and your collaborator doesn't have Finale 2010? Superheroes always have lots of cool gadgets and you're no exception.

Both Finale Reader and Finale NotePad 2010 can read Finale 2010 files. If your collaborator needs to view, play, and print your score, but not actually edit it, Reader is a perfect - and free - solution. If they need to make some minor edits, and you need to make sure that nothing else changes in the file, NotePad is a bargain at $9.95.

I hope these low-cost file sharing tips help you in your work, whether it's creating new music, arranging old music, or foiling the plans of supervillains!

Comments

9/14/2009 12:23:02 PM #

Chris Aher

Quite frankly, blog post represents a workable alternative to a problem that shouldn't exist.  It represents what appears to me, in my professional opinion, to be poor technical planning and design is the development cycle.  

In my professional life, I am responsible for managing the technical architecture, planning and systems engineering for a suite of complex, specialized systems for internal company use in a highly technical industry.  My development group is somewhat larger (approx 120 developers & systems engineers) than the MM team if published info is correct.  While the addition of new features is desirable and often necessary, the appropriate level of backward compatibility is also a hard requirement in our environment.  Of course it requires more careful planning, design and implementation (read more expensive development) but if sharing data across a wide user base is important ( and I think it is for Finale, etc) then this should be considered a requirement.

Last summer, I was considering making a fairly large personal investment in MM stock.  The response that I got from MM customer support on this subject was one of the factors that convinced me that this may not be such a good idea.

Regards,
Chris

Chris Aher United States

9/15/2009 3:28:05 PM #

Daniel Menjivar

It would be nice if Finale would adopt the XML format as the standard for their files to solve this backward-compatability issue...

Daniel Menjivar Canada

9/16/2009 5:01:54 AM #

Jerry

But Finale 2010 becomes crippled in various ways under Windows 7, and I really, really, really, really hate running a dual boot with Vista.  Anyway I have various problems running Finale under Vista, mostly due to problems with the drivers for my Creative Elite Pro soundcard, and I have fatal problems running Finale under Windows 7 (which runs beautifully for nearly every other program).  The solution would be to run a version of Finale that runs successfully under Windows 7.  Any hope on the horizon?

Jerry United States

9/22/2009 4:29:34 AM #

Scott

Thanks for the feedback! I’m glad to forward Chris’ feature request for full backwards compatibility within Finale and Daniel's suggestion that we adopt MusicXML as our file format.

Scott United States

9/22/2009 4:34:27 AM #

Scott

Hi Jerry,

Because late-breaking changes can always take place before a new operating system is released, MakeMusic typically waits until we've tested in the actual release version of any new operating system before commenting on compatibility. I'm sorry to hear Vista isn't working well for you. If there's any aspect of Finale running on Vista you're not happy with, we'd be glad to help -- just visit http://finalemusic.com/support.aspx and click on Contact Support.

Scott United States

3/1/2010 1:14:45 AM #

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