(For a full description of learned chords, 
 see Chord symbols. 
 These instructions describe how to teach Finale several learned chords 
 before you enter them with either of the automatic chord symbol entry 
 methods described above. Of course, you can always create a learned chord 
 while you’re entering chord symbols; when Finale displays its Unknown 
 Chord Suffix“Finale cannot find a match” dialog box, click I’ll Do It. 
 The chord you then construct in the Chord Suffix Editor dialog box is 
 a learned chord.)
        If you plan to enter chords from your MIDI 
 keyboard (or by letting Finale analyze existing chords in the score), 
 you can save time by anticipating the learned chords you’ll need to teach 
 Finale. For example, if your piece contains “V11” chords (such as F/G 
 or Dm7/G), major sixth chords, or any chords with nonstandard names (C2, 
 for example), use this method to teach them to Finale before you enter 
 them. Once Finale has learned such chords, it will automatically display 
 the proper symbol when it encounters them (via MIDI or by analyzing the 
 notes in the score).
        
        
            - Click the Chord tool  . The Chord Menu appears. . The Chord Menu appears.
- Choose Chord > Edit 
 Learned Chords. The Edit Learned Chords dialog 
 box appears. Remember that Finale always associates a learned chord with 
 a particular scale degree; therefore, if the key signature in the display 
 isn’t the correct one for the music to which you’ll be adding chord symbols, 
 click the Set Key button and specify the correct key, so that Finale will 
 be able to recognize the new chord in the correct context.
- Click Learn. Finale asks you to play 
 the chord on your MIDI keyboard.
- Play the chord. What counts is the bass 
 note and the selection of pitches in the chord; the voicing and the octave 
 register don’t matter. As soon as you play the chord, Finale displays 
 the Chord Definition dialog box, where you can build the actual chord 
 symbol you want to associate with the pattern of notes you just played.
- Construct the chord symbol in the usual way. 
 Click OK (or press ENTER). 
 See To define and enter 
 a chord symbol manually or To enter a chord symbol manually with 
 MIDI data input, for instructions in the use of the Chord Definition 
 dialog box. 
When you return to the Edit Learned Chords 
 dialog box, you can once again click Learn to repeat the process, teaching 
 Finale as many new chord symbols as you want. Note that Finale stores 
 learned chords along with regular Chord Suffixes in a Chord Suffix Library 
 (see To create 
 or load a Chord Suffix Library). Therefore, you can load the learned 
 chords you create in one document into another one without having to redefine 
 them.
        
            - Click OK (or press ENTER). 
 The next time you add chord symbols to your score using Finale’s automatic 
 (MIDI or note-analysis) methods, Finale will recognize the chord you’ve 
 just taught it, and it will display the chord symbol you’ve told Finale 
 to use. (Finale will also recognize the learned chord in other keys—but 
 only if it falls on the same scale degree. That is, if you teach Finale 
 to recognize Csus2 in the key of C, it will also recognize Fsus2 in the 
 key of F—but it won’t recognize Fsus2 in the key of C, unless you teach 
 it that chord too.)