mozart 10 is now available.
And if you have already bought mozart 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 (=2005), or 9
then you may obtain mozart 10
at a special upgrade price.
Here, for those already familiar with mozart, is a list of some of the features
new in mozart 10.
Speed of response
Rallentando, Accelerando, Rubato, Pause (=Fermata)

If a
start of an accel/rall passage is entered in the music, it extends to the next tempo marking and ends with that tempo; the
piece can then jump to a "following" tempo immediately after the rall/accel section.
Accidentals
All accidentals
(
Courtesy accidentals may now be put in parentheses, as long as there are not too many on one stack of notes!
Other music elements
Dotted ties are now supported.
1st-, 2nd-,... time bars may now be configured to allow
play-back to re-use a bar bracket and go through them in different orders.
Octave markings on clefs now provide the option of writing for a 4' choir as if it were an 8' choir (eg showing no octave marking on a descant
recorder and showing the tenor recorder as sounding an octave lower than written).
Redirections (DC, DS, etc.) attached to barlines may be moved up
to avoid high notes.
Rehearsal marks are now offered in a choice of 4 styles: letters in sequence (A B C D E...); numbers in sequence (1 2 3 4 5...);
roman numerals in sequence ( I II III IV V...); or bar-line numbers.
A start-of-repeat bar may now be entered at the very start of the music.
Key signature changes may be drawn with cancelling naturals, (upper example on the right) or without
cancelling naturals (lower example)
by checking/unchecking "cancel old key signature" in the key-change dialogue
box.
Staccatissimo is now supported, with the option of placing the accents on bulbs or stems.
Reiteration multiplets are now supported.
Alternative styles are available for multiple bars' rest.
Lute tablature is now available, in addition to modern guitar tablature.
Mozart will now create multiplets under all circumstances: for any note value in any time signature.
Text
Mozart now gives each text item a "text style" and associates a font with that text style.
This means that if a set of directions such as "Moderato", "Andante", "Allegro con brio" are all given the same style, then editing the style once will change
all of them to match.
All text in Mozart is now stored and processed in Unicode format.
This allows individual text items to contain any characters. The example on the right shows titles in Serbian
using both Latin and Cyrillic alphabets.| Examples: | |
| Ctrl+' e |
Ctrl+/ o |
| Ctrl+u a |
Ctrl+ @ c |
|
Ctrl+& b |
Ctrl+& = |

Page formatting
A hard page break is now supported.
You can now have a panoramic view,
scrolling left to right with no line breaks. Commands on the View Menu switch between panoramic and paginated views.Macros
There is a new set of commands for moving the caret up and down to specific items and to points on the stave.
These are on a new toolbar. They are particularly useful in defining
macros.User interface
The appearance of selected blocks has improved.
The "select whole piece" command does not now select all strands automatically.
A magnification toolbar
has been added, now making changing magnification very fast indeed.
The toolbar shows the magnification, and has zoom out and zoom in buttons,
as well as buttons to zoom to sizes 1, 2, 2+, 3, 4, 5 (for which there are also menu items).
A more powerful paste command
now allows you to paste selected bars onto parallel staves, comprehending key
and tempo changes.
The label of the active stave is now drawn
in the active stave colour for easier identification. This illustration exaggerates the effect for purposes of demonstration - you
can, of course, choose your own colour scheme! 
There is a new Full Screen (toggle) command on the View menu.
In full screen mode the main frame is maximised and the tool bars are suppressed.
Going into full screen mode also sets the magnification of the active music window so that a full page is visible,
and makes page up and down commands go to the top of a page. This is to facilitate using
Mozart with a foot
pedal page turner such as those found at http://www.biliinc.com/
(illustrated).Floating tools
In addition to the usual toolbars "docked"
at the edges of the window, there are four "large tools" which are able to remain open and float independently, allowing you
to use them with any active window, without being shut down. These are :
Find and FindNext commands make navigation around the music much quicker.
The macro tool lets you
define and use macros. (A macro is a sequence of commands which you can
execute as a single command, allowing you to apply a complex operation
repeatedly.)
The chord symbol tool is now a
"modeless dialogue box", allowing you to move around the music without closing
it.
There is
now a toolbar for showing/hiding
the floating tools.On-line Help
Template management
Instruments
Appearance
Above: Mozart 9 appearance on screen.
Below: Mozart 10's antialiased beams and more conventionally positioned staccato markings.
Menus contain bitmaps.