Tilting Mirror dialog box
         
 
        How to get there
        
            - Click the Mirror tool   . .
- Click an empty measure (to create a new composite 
 ) 
 or a measure with a Mirror icon (to edit a composite mirror).
What it does
        The Tilting Mirror is so named because 
 you can maneuver this one-measure "window" around the score, 
 copying individual notes from various measures. The result is a composite 
 mirror, each note of which is dynamically linked to the note from which 
 it was mirrored.
        The Tilting Mirror initially appears blank, 
 because you’re viewing the measure you originally clicked (which, you’ll 
 recall, was empty). Click the up, down, left, and right arrows to move 
 from measure to measure in the score; the contents of each measure appear 
 in this window.
        To specify several notes of a measure you 
 want included in your composite mirror, click the arrow buttons until 
 the source measure appears in the window. Then drag the handle at the 
 top of each cut bar—the dotted vertical lines—until the cut bars enclose 
 the notes you want included in your composite mirror. Click Prev, Next, 
 Insert, or OK; Finale asks you if you’re sure you want to add the selected 
 notes—hereafter called a mirror fragment—to the composite mirror. 
        
            - Prev 
 • Next. Click these buttons to scroll among the mirror fragments 
 you’ve already assembled in the measure. If the music displayed between 
 the two dotted-line cut bars is a fragment you haven’t yet selected for 
 inclusion in this composite mirror, click Prev or Next to select it.
- Delete. 
 Click Delete to remove the fragment you’re viewing from this mirrored 
 measure.
- Insert. 
 Click Insert if you want to place a new mirror fragment just before the 
 one you’re viewing. Finale returns the cut bars to the ends of the display 
 window so that you can choose a new musical fragment (click the arrow 
 buttons if necessary). Click OK, Prev, Next, or Insert again in the usual 
 way. This time, however, Finale inserts the fragment instead of adding 
 it to the end of the composite mirror.
- Layer: 
 1 • 2 • 3 • 4. This pop-up list identifies the layer (of the 
 source measure) whose contents you’re viewing. Switch to a different layer 
 by choosing its name. (Your composite mirror fragment can include notes 
 from all layers.)
- [Up, 
 down, left, and right arrow buttons]. These arrows let you change 
 your view of the source measure. Click the UP ARROW to view the measure 
 in the staff immediately above, the right arrow to view the next measure, 
 and so on. As you proceed, you’ll see the contents of each measure you 
 view, adjusted for the mirror measure’s clef. (If you move your "view" 
 to another mirrored measure, it will appear blank in this window.)
- Cancel. 
 Click Cancel to return to the score without creating a mirror (or, if 
 you’ve been editing an existing mirror, without saving your changes).
- OK. 
 Click OK to conclude your assembly of the composite mirror measure. (If 
 the music displayed between the two dotted-line cut bars is a fragment 
 you haven’t yet selected for inclusion in this composite mirror, Finale 
 asks if you want to save changes.) If you’ve just created a new composite 
 mirror, the Mirror Attributes dialog box appears, in which you can specify 
 a number of additional characteristics for the composite mirror. See Mirror Attributes dialog box.
See Also:
        
        Mirror 
 Tool