Getting Started Tutorials Manual MIDI and Audio
After you have completed your score in QuickScore, choose Save As from the File menu.
The Save as file dialog appears. From the Save as type dropdown list box choose Wave. Set the name of your wave file in the File name list box.
If you have chosen to show the Saving Audio Files dialog when saving audio files, the Saving Audio Files dialog will appear. If you don't see the Saving Audio Files dialog, and you want to change the way audio is saved, you can access it by clicking on Saving Audio Files at the top of the Audio Setup dialog, available under the Options menu.
Under Windows XP the Saving Audio Files dialog lets you choose between using QuickScore's Audio Mixer and using Windows MCI Audio. If you choose Windows MCI Audio, you must select the MCI device and input line for saving audio.
You may have several audio mixers installed on your system. If you have more than one, you can choose the one you want QuickScore Elite to use by selecting it from the Device dropdown list box.
Choose the input line for saving audio files in the Input Line dropdown list box. This is the audio line that the system uses when QuickScore Elite is playing. Ordinarily Stereo Mix or something similar is a good choice for this audio line.
Under Windows Vista and later versions of Windows, the Saving Audio Files dialog lets you choose between using QuickScore's Audio Mixer and using Windows WASAPI Audio mixer.
If you choose to use QuickScore's Audio Mixer, you must be using VST or ReWire instruments as sound sources.
When finished, click OK.
Your score will play from start to finish. When finished your score has been saved as a wave file with the name you chose in the Save As file dialog.
Related Topics:
Open, save and print files and create tracks
Set the names for your instrument's patches (or programs)
Change the play/mute/solo status of a track
Open, save and print files and create tracks
Enter a tablature chord symbol
Enter different types of barlines
Change a note's pitch by semitones
Change the enharmonic spelling of a note
Make sure notes display with their entered durations
Split a track onto a treble and bass clef
Put notes in a split track on either the treble or the bass staff
Change the vertical position of tablature chords
Change how barlines are connected in a score
Change fonts for titles, lyrics, text or symbols
Change the display of bar numbering
Change the display of page numbering
Change the quantization with which music is displayed
Transpose the display of notes in a track
Change the way notes are grouped together
Change the number of bars per line
Change the number of staves per page
Change the way rests are displayed
Change the way ties are displayed
Change the direction of stems and beams
Display independent voices in a bar on the same staff
Change the display of drum notes
Synchronize with another sequencer as slave
Synchronize with another sequencer as master
Synchronize with a tape device
Add your score to a video or file soundtrack
Export an audio file using the Audio Mixer
Select a sound bank on a GS Standard instrument
Check whether notes are within an instrument's range
See what events are in your tracks
Add composer notes to your composition