10 Dorico Tips Every Composer Should Know

Advanced Engraving in Dorico: Techniques for Professional Scores

Engraving well in Dorico means combining musical knowledge with the software’s powerful layout, notation, and engraving controls. This guide covers advanced techniques to produce polished, publication-quality scores: layout planning, precise spacing, detailed beaming and tuplets, optimal dynamics and articulation placement, advanced text handling, and final export tips.

1. Plan the score layout

  • Page size & margins: Set the correct page size and generous inner margins for bound scores (Layout Options > Page Setup).
  • Flows vs. layouts: Use separate flows and dedicated layouts for movements or sections to avoid manual overrides that break later edits.
  • System and staff grouping: Configure staff visibility and system assignments early (Setup mode → Players and Layout Options → Staves), ensuring logical grouping for ensembles.

2. Master vertical spacing and condensing

  • Staff spacing controls: Use Layout Options > Vertical Spacing to set ideal minimum distances, and use staff spacing overrides for local adjustments (Engrave mode → Staff Spacing).
  • Condensing for ensembles: In Layout Options > Players, set condensing rules per player type. Use Dorico’s automatic condensing first, then refine manually by adjusting player visibility and force-rest settings to prevent collisions.
  • Manual staff spacing tweaks: Apply staff spacing changes sparingly via staff-slur and staff-spacing handles in Engrave mode to preserve automatic behavior where possible.

3. Optimize note spacing and rhythmic layout

  • Note spacing settings: Tweak Note Spacing in Layout Options to control horizontal density. Use “Minimum space per crotchet” and related multipliers to match engraving conventions.
  • Avoid collisions: Use Engrave mode collision avoidance tools and nudging to resolve overlaps between notes, dynamics, and articulations.
  • Beaming rules: Customize beaming in Engrave mode or via properties to split/force beams according to musical phrasing and metric grouping. Use caret-positioned beam breaks for exceptional cases.

4. Perfect beaming, tuplets, and tremolos

  • Tuplet positioning: Use properties to show bracketed or bracketless tuplets; adjust tuplet baseline and bracket shape in Engrave mode for clarity.
  • Custom tremolo beams: For multi-note tremolos, use the Tremolo property settings and adjust beam alignment manually in Engrave mode when worried about spacing or collisions.
  • Cross-staff beaming: Use Dorico’s cross-staff beaming features (Shift+Alt/Option modifiers) and then refine stems and beam positions in Engrave mode for consistent alignment.

5. Dynamics, articulations, and expressions

  • Collision avoidance: Set priority and placement rules for dynamics and articulations in Engrave mode to prevent overlaps. Use the Properties panel to lock positions that must remain fixed.
  • Vertical alignment: Align dynamics and hairpins across staves via the Align and Distribute functions, and use custom vertical offsets for expressive needs.
  • Articulation grouping: Use articulation stacking options to control order and ensure repeatable, consistent placement.

6. Advanced text and staff labels

  • Style consistency: Define paragraph and character styles for dynamics, lyrics, and instructions in Engrave mode so text appearance is consistent across the score.
  • Custom fonts & SMuFL glyphs: Install and reference music fonts and access SMuFL glyphs for special symbols via the Glyphs panel; assign via text or technique mapping for reproducible engraving.
  • Staff labels and system text: Use local overrides minimally; prefer global style definitions and edit System Text styles for rehearsal marks, tempo text, and cues.

7. Formatting barlines, rehearsal marks, and clefs

  • Barline types: Control barline styles per bar or flow; set repeat barlines and final barlines in Engrave mode where subtle placement matters.
  • Rehearsal marks: Use automatic rehearsal marks but adjust font, box style, and position in Engrave mode for orchestral scores.
  • Clef and transposition handling: Use caution with cautionary clefs and transposing instrument clefs—adjust spacing after clef changes to avoid collisions with nearby elements.

8. Working with cues and ossias

  • Cue settings: Create cues via Players and Flows; adjust cue size and positioning in Engrave mode. Use scaling and placement to ensure cues read clearly but don’t clutter the main staff.
  • Ossia staves: Use condensed staves for ossia passages where appropriate and hide empty staves to keep page turns clean.

9. Fine-tuning collisions and manual adjustments

  • Engrave mode tools: Use Engrave mode’s handles and the Properties panel to nudge items horizontally and vertically. Apply local formatting sparingly and document where you’ve overridden defaults for future edits.
  • Reset overrides: Keep track of manual overrides and be prepared to reset them if significant global layout changes are needed.

10. Export, proof, and finalize

  • Proofing print layout: Use View Options to preview page breaks, system breaks, and staff visibility. Print a high-resolution PDF to check physical spacing and page turns.
  • PDF and MusicXML: Export high-quality PDFs for print and use MusicXML for sharing editable scores—test MusicXML imports if sending to other notation apps.
  • Fonts and embedding: Embed fonts when exporting PDF to ensure consistent appearance; for professional engraving, package fonts and a brief readme if delivering source files.

Quick checklist before delivery

  • Check system and page breaks for musical sense.
  • Verify consistent text styles and rehearsal marks.
  • Confirm dynamics and articulations align across systems.
  • Test printed proof for collisions and readability at intended size.
  • Embed fonts and export a high-resolution PDF.

This workflow leverages Dorico’s automation while applying targeted manual control where needed, producing clean, readable, and professional-looking engraved scores suitable for publication.

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