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Only in Sibelius: Versions and Comments
Video narrated by Daniel Spreadbury, Senior Product Manager for Sibelius.
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Track changes and compare versions
Another ingenious first in music software, Versions keeps track of revisions to your score, lets you look back at earlier versions of it, and see what changes were made since.
This is invaluable for all kinds of people. Students can record their progress as they write coursework, and submit an automatic commentary along with their piece. Teachers can track what each student has done since last week. Composers and arrangers can look back at earlier revisions, or see changes made by orchestrators, publishers and other collaborators.
So now, there’s no need to fish out crumpled-up paper from your bin, or hunt through backups from weeks ago. To see any earlier version of a score, just choose from a list of them on the toolbar. You can print out these past versions, play them back, or export them as separate files. You can also copy music from them, to resurrect an idea you’d discarded – or even revert to an old version entirely.
To save a version at any point, just click a button – the date, time, and a name and optional comment are saved with it, so you won’t have to remember which version is which. And all versions are stored in the same score you’re working on, so you don’t need to go searching for them later.
Comparing versions
What’s more, you can compare two versions of a score, or even two different scores, to see what the differences are. This produces a summary and detailed list of all the differences between them. Objects which have been added, changed or deleted are also color-coded in the music, so they’re easy to spot.
You can even export a Word file which lists all these changes, and graphics of each page with the differences highlighted.
Add comments
Comments are like Post-It™ notes you can add to your score. And just like the real thing, you can use them to write reminders to yourself, or to communicate with someone else you’ll be sending your score to.
To create a comment, just click the new toolbar button, then type – it automatically includes your name, the date and time. Add a comment to a selected passage, and it will also state the instrument(s) and bars referred to.
You can change the appearance of comments, and ones written by different people are automatically color-coded – ideal if you’re sharing a score with a student, teacher, arranger or editor.
Finally, you can resize comments, minimize them (so they don’t get in the way), or hide them throughout the score.
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On Versions & Comments...
“I am excited the most about Versions: we are constantly tweaking scores throughout a season, being able to reference what changes were made will be great.”
Bryan Harmsen, marching band composer/arranger, Louisville, KY
“All of my students are required to keep a composition diary of the process. Many of them fall behind or forget what their process was. Sibelius 6 doesn't just remind them, it allows them to embed each version and their learning reflections right into the score, and will even summarize changes over a series of versions for them.”
James Humberstone, composer in residence, MLC School, Sydney
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From the Sibelius Blog
Wed, 18 Nov 2009
NumPad 2.0 for iPhone has dedicated Sibelius mode
I received an email from Luc Vandal of iPhone developer edovia about the release of NumPad 2.0 for iPhone and iPod touch... read more »
Sat, 14 Nov 2009
Sound on Sound: “Sibelius 6 once again raises the bar”
After we release a new version of Sibelius, the review I most look forward to seeing is the one in Sound on Sound magazine... read more »
Mon, 09 Nov 2009
Hypermusic Prologue revisited
A few months ago I posted a snippet of the manuscript for Hector Parra’s opera, Hypermusic Prologue... read more »