MuseScore Studio Handbook
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  • MuseScore Studio Handbook
  • About the handbook
    • Editing the Handbook
    • Style guide
    • Using GitBook
  • Introduction
    • Download and installation
    • Create your first score
    • Upgrading to MuseScore Studio 4 from earlier versions
  • Navigation
    • Accessibility
    • The user interface
    • Navigating your score
    • Timeline
    • Braille
  • Basics
    • Setting up your score
    • Entering notes and rests
    • Working with multiple voices
    • Input by duration mode
    • Alternative note input methods
    • Adding and removing measures
    • Selecting elements
    • Editing notes and rests
    • Copy and paste
    • Using the palettes
    • Properties panel
    • Adjusting elements directly
    • Parts
    • Default keyboard shortcuts
  • Notation
    • Instruments, staves, and systems
      • Instruments and system markings
      • Showing staves only where needed
      • Implode and explode
      • Mid-score instrument changes
      • Staff type change
      • Staff/Part properties
      • Brackets
    • Rhythm, meter, and measures
      • Time signatures
      • Stems and flags
      • Beams
      • Regroup rhythms
      • Tuplets
      • Barlines
      • Measure numbering
      • Measure rests and multimeasure rests
      • Pickup and non-metered measures
      • Measure properties
    • Pitch
      • Clefs
      • Key signatures
      • Transposition
      • Octave lines
      • Noteheads
      • Ambitus
      • Respell pitches
    • Expressive markings
      • Articulations
      • Dynamics and hairpins
      • Slurs and ties
      • Laissez vibrer ties
      • Breaths and pauses
      • Ornaments
      • Arpeggios and glissandos
      • Grace notes
      • Tremolos and rolls
      • Other lines
      • Other symbols
    • Repeats
      • Repeat signs
      • Voltas
      • Jumps and markers
      • Items across repeats and jumps
      • Changes and courtesies at repeats and jumps
      • Measure and multi-measure repeats
  • Idiomatic notation
    • Keyboard
      • Pedal
      • Cross-staff notation
      • Accordion notation
    • Guitar
      • Fretboard diagrams
      • Guitar techniques
      • Creating a tablature staff
      • Entering and editing tablature notation
      • Customizing a tablature staff
      • Applying capos
      • Alternate string tunings
      • Guitar bends
    • Harp
    • Percussion
      • Inputting percussion notation
      • Customizing the percussion panel
      • Percussion kit customization
      • Other percussion notation
  • Alternative notation
    • Mensural notation and Mensurstrich
    • Slash notation
    • Custom staff types
  • Text
    • Entering and editing text
    • Formatting text
    • Staff Text, System Text and Expression Text
    • Tempo markings
    • Lyrics
    • Fingering
    • Chord symbols
    • Figured bass
    • Rehearsal marks
    • Header and footer
    • Text blocks
  • Formatting
    • Page layout concepts
    • Positioning of elements
    • Score size and spacing
    • Systems and horizontal spacing
    • Pages and vertical spacing
    • Using frames for additional content
    • Working with images
    • Using sections for multiple movements or songs
  • File management
    • Opening and saving scores
    • File export
    • Working with MusicXML files
    • Backup and recovered files
    • Project properties
    • Publish to MuseScore.com
    • Share on Audio.com
  • Sound and playback
    • Playback controls
    • Mixer
    • SoundFonts
    • Installing MuseSounds
    • Sound flags
    • Swing playback
    • Working with MIDI
    • Working with VST and VSTi
  • Customization
    • Language
    • Appearance
    • Toolbars and windows
    • Templates and styles
    • Palettes
    • Workspaces
    • Keyboard shortcuts
    • Preferences
    • Plugins
  • Support
    • Getting help
    • Revert to factory settings
    • Troubleshooting
  • Appendix
    • Command line usage
    • All keyboard shortcuts
    • Changes for MDL percussion
    • Upgrade from MuseScore 3.x
    • Glossary
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On this page
  • Screen readers
  • Speech on Windows
  • Speech on macOS
  • Speech on Linux
  • Keyboard access
  • Navigating the UI
  • Navigating the score
  • Video tutorials

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  1. Navigation

Accessibility

PreviousUpgrading to MuseScore Studio 4 from earlier versionsNextThe user interface

Last updated 1 month ago

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Screen readers

MuseScore Studio supports NVDA on Windows and VoiceOver on macOS. JAWS is not currently supported. Support for other screen readers varies.

Speech on Windows

If speech isn't working in MuseScore, try pressing Alt+F to focus the File menu, then press Esc twice to return to where you were in the app, at which point the screen reader should start working again. This tends to be needed if you start the screen reader after MuseScore is already running.

As mentioned above, MuseScore's speech output with JAWS is not currently as complete as it is with Narrator or NVDA.

Screen Reader
Modifier key
On/off shortcut
Settings shortcut

Narrator (built in)

Narrator = Caps Lock

Win+Ctrl+Enter

Win+Ctrl+N

NVDA = Ins / Caps Lock

Off: NVDA+Q Toggle: NVDA+S

NVDA+N

JAWS = Ins / Caps Lock

Off: JAWS+F4

JAWS+J

Speech on macOS

VoiceOver's must be turned off while using MuseScore 4. You can toggle Quick Nav on or off by pressing the Left and Right arrow keys simultaneously while VoiceOver is running, or via VoiceOver Utility > Commanders.

MuseScore's interface is navigable with the tab cursor as well as with VoiceOver's own cursor. In general it's best to use the tab cursor because this matches the interface on other platforms, hence is what you will find described in most documentation and tutorials. When using the tab cursor, remember to use the arrow keys as well as Tab as described in . VoiceOver's cursor can be used to reach areas of the application that are not yet accessible to the tab cursor.

Screen Reader
Modifier key
On/off shortcut
Settings shortcut

VoiceOver (built in)

VO = Ctrl+Option / Caps Lock

Cmd+F5

VO+F8

Speech on Linux

On Linux it's necessary to start the screen reader running before you launch MuseScore, otherwise accessibility features will be disabled to save system resources (the same is true for all Qt applications on Linux). If you forget to do this, simply exit MuseScore and launch it again, this time with the screen reader running.

Orca is the most feature-complete screen reader available for Linux. Orca is built into the GNOME desktop environment, so it's recommended that Linux users with accessibility needs use a distribution based on GNOME or one of its derivatives.

Screen Reader
Modifier key
On/off shortcut
Settings shortcut

Orca (built into GNOME)

Orca = Ins / Caps Lock

Super+Alt+S

Orca+Space or run orca --setup

Keyboard access

Navigating the UI

MuseScore's UI (user interface) has a hierarchical system of keyboard navigation, which is different to what you may be used to in other applications. In MuseScore's system, the Tab key skips some controls to save time. If you want to reach these controls, you need to use the arrow keys as well as Tab.

Shortcut
Action

F6 / ` / Shift+F6 / Shift+`

Move between UI sections (` is the backtick or grave accent key, found near the Tab key or left Shift on most QWERTY keyboards).

Tab / Shift+Tab

Move between control groups.

Up / Down / Left / Right

Move between controls within a group.

Esc

Stop interacting with an editable text control (so you can move away from it with the arrow keys).

Enter / Return

Activate the current control.

Space

Activate the current control or select an item in a list.

Navigating the score

The following shortcuts are of particular value to accessibility users:

Shortcut
Action

Right / Left

Move to next or previous note, chord, or rest.

Alt+Right / Alt+Left

Move to next or previous element. These shortcuts enable you to visit all kinds of notation elements, not just notes and rests.

Alt+Up / Alt+Down

Move to note above or below. These shortcuts enable you to move between individual notes in a chord, and also to reach notes and rests in other voices and in other staves.

F2 / Alt+Shift+E

Edit selected element. Equivalent to double-clicking with the mouse. Use it to edit text objects or adjust the length of hairpins, slurs, and voltas (use the Tab key to change which end of the line you are adjusting). When you have finished editing, press Esc to return to Normal mode.

Menu / Shift+F10

Video tutorials

The following accessibility tutorials are designed to get you up and running with MuseScore, using your keyboard and screen reader. They don't cover every aspect of the program, but they should give you a solid foundation that will enable you can take full advantage of the rest of this Handbook.

Video
Topics covered

Installation of MuseScore on Windows, including Muse Hub and Muse Sounds. The process is similar on macOS and Linux, although on Linux you need to install Muse Hub and MuseScore separately.

Initial score setup, including choosing instruments, key signature, time signature, and other settings.

Basic note input.

Using the palettes to add markings (e.g. dynamics) to your score.

Main window of the program, so you can understand where all the different panels, toolbars, and controls are, and how to reach them by keyboard.

NVDA ()

JAWS ()

Please note that UI navigation shortcuts are fixed and cannot be changed, unlike the shortcuts for score navigation, which can be .

Open context menu for selected element(s). Equivalent to right-clicking with the mouse. It provides access to various options that depend on the element selected. Use this shortcut on a to provide access to , and .

Other aspects of keyboard navigation are described on pages throughout this handbook. All score navigation and manipulation shortcuts can be .

Quick Nav mode
Navigating the UI
customized in Preferences
customized in Preferences
free
paid
range selection
Measure properties
Staff/Part properties
Installing MuseScore
Score setup
Entering music
Adding markings
The user interface