The operating system shouldn't have anything to do with which specific characters are used for accidentals, since they're defined by Unicode, not by OS. Do you know of any 'System File Checker' tool for the Mac OS? Perhaps those characters have been corrupted somehow. I guess the tooltip uses the system's font. Your screenshot of the Key Signatures show that those are OK. MuseScore also has its own fonts for sharps and flats. These are characters from the system font used by my OS. The '♮' character, U+266E, is defined as 'Music Natural Sign'. The '♭' character, U+266D, is defined as 'Music Flat Sign'. In the Microsoft OS fonts - named Segoe - 'F♯ major, D♯ minor' uses the '♯' (U+266F) character which is designated 'Music Sharp Sign'. The number 4DC0 is the hexidecimal label for that particular Unicode character. I know your OS is Mac (I'm on Windows), but I did some searching and found out that 'F䷀major, D䷀minor' displays the '䷀' (U+4DC0) character which is designated 'Undefined'. I changed that setting from English (US) to English (United Kingdom). Back then, I did change the font from English (US) to English (GB), but it was the Language setting in the Windows operating system which ultimately worked. It definitely was a problem with the fonts, and now I realize it was with the Windows UI font. I searched the forums but could not find the specific issue I had faced with all B-flat instrument names not displaying the ♭ sign. Tooltips for key signature palette (easy to identify because only some of the palette names have been translated into Arabic): Same as in System. Arabic: I don't speak it but at this point I was interested to see the results (and to see whether I'd be able to figure out how to switch back). However, the tooltips for the key signature palette show up exactly the same as in System and English (along with text in English, not Spanish, meaning that these haven't been translated at all, a different issue).ĥ. In other words, they don't use the symbols at all. The tooltips for the toolbar say Sostenido, Bemol, and Becuadro, the correct words for sharp, flat, and natural, respectively. Español: Since I speak it, I figured I'd try. The tooltips for the key signature palette are the same as in System and English (US).Ĥ. Note however, that it is not a true sharp symbol, just shift-3 (on a US keyboard, anyway). English (GB): No change except that the tooltips for the toolbars show # for sharp and and double # for double sharp. That's an interesting idea and here are the results:ģ.
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