Musescore - Wikipedia
MuseScore - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MuseScore MuseScore MuseScore is a scorewriter for Windows, MuseScore macOS, and Linux, comparable to Finale and Sibelius,[4] supporting a wide variety of file formats and input methods. It is released as free and open-source software under the GNU General Public License. MuseScore is accompanied by a freemium mobile score viewer and playback app, and an online score sharing platform. Contents MuseScore 2.0 in full screen, showing History palettes, inspector, and piano keyboard Features Original author(s) Werner Schweer Supported file formats Developer(s) The MuseScore Online score sharing developer Mobile player community[1] Portable application Initial release 4 February 2011[2] Versions Stable release 3.3.2 / 14 November Pre-release 2019 MuseScore 1 MuseScore 2 Repository github.com MuseScore 3 /musescore /MuseScore (https:// Development github.com/musesco Adoption re/MuseScore) Crowd-sourced engraving projects Written in C++, Qt Open Goldberg Variations Open Well-Tempered Clavier Operating system Windows 7 and Braille editions later, Linux, macOS OpenScore 10.10 and later MuseScore.com copyright issues Platform x86-64 (Windows, Linux and macOS), See also IA-32 (Windows References only) Size 101 to 144 MB History Available in 20 languages[3] 1 von 10 19.11.19, 16:51 MuseScore - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MuseScore MuseScore was originally created as a fork List of languages of the MusE sequencer's codebase. At that Afrikaans, Catalan, Chinese (Traditional- time, MusE included notation capabilities Hong Kong, Traditional-Taiwan and and in 2002, Werner Schweer, one of the Simplified), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English MusE developers, decided to remove (United Kingdom and United States), notation support from MusE and fork the French, Galician, German, Hungarian, code into a stand-alone notation program.
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