Finale 2011: Less to learn and remember

by Tom Johnson 8. June 2010 10:12

Today I’m in a coffee shop in Madison, Wisconsin, brainstorming blog topics between stops on one of my many Finale road trips. In doing so I was checking out Justin’s excellent blog posts on Staff Layout and Lyrics in Finale 2011, and I began to notice a theme. It seems to me that many of my favorite Finale 2011 improvements aren’t so much about doing things Finale couldn’t before, instead they’re about HOW to accomplish those things. And the big difference, at least for me, is that there’s so much less to learn and remember.

While the Staff Layout improvements alone offer some very significant examples of this theme, I wanted to use one small addition that Justin mentioned to illustrate my point.

To do so we have to travel back to a world before Finale 2011. Imagine you’re Tom Johnson, and you’re demonstrating Finale 2010 somewhere, and you’re entering lyrics when an audience member asks you how to ENTER VERSE NUMBERS (cue the echo chamber so those last three words reverberate horrifically).

Well, you click on the first lyric and type a 1, right? That works. But things get tricky when you want to put a space between that number and the first lyric. Upon hitting the spacebar Finale assumes you’re moving to the next note. The solution is to type something that looks like a space but works like a character. Okay, some of the audience is still following you, now all you have to do is tell them which key to type. And here you have to say: “All you have to do on a Windows computer is type “ALT-0160!”

Of course it works fine every time, but holding down the Alt key and typing a four digit number isn’t exactly intuitive (at least Mac users only had to type Option-spacebar). And who can remember which four-digit number to type? Did I mention you have to repeat this for every verse?

To add verse numbers in Finale 2011 I go to the Lyrics menu and choose Auto-Number>Verses. Done.  Numbers and appropriate space appear before each verse. 

It’s not that the same result couldn’t be obtained with earlier versions of Finale – it could. But first you had to learn the steps and then remember the number. From big things like hiding staves to little things like numbering verses, common tasks are more intuitive in Finale 2011 so there’s less to learn and less to remember.

If only Finale could make it easier to remember where I left my sunglasses. If you’ve seen them, please let me know by clicking on the “Comments” button below.

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Tom Johnson

Comments

5/31/2010 4:56:34 AM #

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6/2/2010 6:50:15 AM #

Jon88

Learn the steps and remember the number, or take the lazy man's way out (mine) and have alt-0160 macro'd in my programmable keyboard Wink

Jon88 United States

6/2/2010 2:17:36 PM #

Scott Yoho

Good thinking, Jon!

Best wishes,

Scott at MakeMusic

Scott Yoho United States

6/4/2010 12:16:59 AM #

Daniel Menjivar

Just got my copy of Finale 2011 today - haven't installed it yet though.

I very quickly browsed through the quick reference guide and noticed an error in the lyrics example.  You're going to laugh at this one!  Autumn Leaves should be in the key of E minor, not A minor - so the second note should be F#, not F like in the example...  (But yes, the first chord is indeed Amin7).  Told you you'd laugh!

Anyways, I'm looking forward to installing Finale 2011 - hopefully I'll have a chance on Monday or Tuesday next week.

More on topic though, I was just telling someone this same thing about Finale - how each new version just makes things easier, and quicker.  It's not so much about new features as much as it is about speed improvements and efficiency enhancements...  to me anyways.  I also noticed in the manual that it appears metatools have been changed?  No need to use the option key with the metatool anymore?  Just the letter?  Cool, but will take some adjusting for sure.

Anyways, I'm excited to start using Finale 2011 - I'm sure I'll have lots of good things to say once I do.

DM

Daniel Menjivar Canada

6/6/2010 5:00:27 PM #

Scott Yoho

Hi Daniel,

Thanks for the input. I’d like to claim that the F natural was on purpose (it does sound much darker that way), and suggest the ability to customize classic melodies is just one of the many wonderful things you can do with Finale, but that’s just silly. I think I need to call the missing key signature a typo – thanks for pointing it out.

I’m not aware of any metatool changes, however. Can you point me to where you saw that in the manual?

Scott at MakeMusic

Scott Yoho United States

6/6/2010 5:32:17 PM #

Daniel Menjivar

Hey Scott,

Sounds darker that way!?  LOL

As for the metatool changes - I just checked Finale 2010 and it turns out the 2011 quick reference guide (pages 33 - 35 on the Mac version) is indeed correct.  For some reason, I thought using metatools required holding down the option key with the letter, (that's how I've been doing it) but it seems the option key is actually not necessary - but it works either way.  I'm not sure why I got into that habit?  Maybe it was required in an older version of Finale?  Hm.  (I thought maybe I was confusing it with the tool palette shortcuts/metatools, but that's the CTRL key...)  So anyways, it appears I was wrong and there is no change to metatools from Finale 2010 to 2011...

I have yet to install Finale 2011 - looks like I'll have a chance around the end of the week...

DM

Daniel Menjivar Canada

6/6/2010 7:08:49 PM #

Scott Yoho

Hi Daniel,

Thanks for the clarification; I'm glad you don't have to change any metatools.

Best wishes,

Scott at MakeMusic

Scott Yoho United States

6/8/2010 4:06:31 AM #

Lubos

I am a fan of Finale, but I think it is a big shame there is still no other way to write nonbreaking space than to use that horrible ALT+160 ;-((( Or does it FINALY changed? Most software (e.g. MS Word) uses something like CTRL+SPACE or CTRL+SHIFT+SPACE. Why Finale not? In some languages (like Slovak) nonbreaking space is a commonly used in lyrics.

Regards,
Lubos.

Lubos Slovakia

6/8/2010 8:08:55 PM #

Scott Yoho

Hi Lubos,

Thanks for your comments: Your wish is our command. In Finale 2011 you enter a non-breaking space by typing CTRL+SPACE. It's also easy to enter a hard hyphen, and an Insert Symbol menu item puts hundreds of characters at your fingertips. There's no need to remember things like ALT+160!

Scott at MakeMusic

Scott Yoho United States

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