That’s Finale Songwriter, which is a stripped down version of Finale. In America, at least, Finale is purchased without a subscription, and updates are at the discretion of the user.
If you’re not using any engraving software at the moment, I’d recommend starting with Dorico from Steinberg.
And Finale Songwriter/Notepad is available as a free download from Finale. No need to purchase it. Website seems to be a scam, offering for purchase what can be obtained for free.
You might also check out Noteflight.com, which is a web and cloud-based music notation editor. Has useful free edition with option to purchase premium features.
While likely no longer perfectly current, I think it gives a good sense as to which features to expect and not expect.
Bear in mind: if you have proof of church/school/military affiliation, you may be able to purchase the full version of Finale at considerably less than the regular retail price:
I wish I could find a good instruction manual for MuseScore. I would likely use it more. The only thing I found is a single sheet that blows the image off the edge of the paper making it unreadable.
Their community is very good about answering questions. I’ve found it fairly intuitive and anything I couldn’t figure out on my own is solved with a quick google search.
sibelius... hands down, this is a transparent piece of software that puts ALL of your focus on composing/arranging, and none on the interface or wrangling notes onto a staff. Don't waste time thinking about the computer or the software... spend ALL of your energy writing music.
"You can spend your life BUILDING the violin, or you can spend your time making it SING... the choice is yours."
I use Musescore and their online handbook and forum have been very helpful. Its a very capable program availble for pc/mac and various mobile devices. You can access the handbook through the program help file or you can download the handbook at https://musescore.org/en/handbook
Sibelius's output is uniformly terrible, especially the note spacing. Some polyphonic scores from the Internet have needed to be re-typeset because of the spacing being so bad that accurately reading note values and rhythms was made much more challenging. May as well just purchase Dorico, from most of the same team and with a much more modern featureset.
My beef with Dorico, as a 20+ -year Finale user, is that the interface is almost exactly the opposite, so it's felt really unnatural to me. But it's a great program, and going places, and if you don't have fossilized brain cells like I do, it would be the way to go.
"I actually own Finale and have found it uniformly annoying for the last 20 years" I agree Charles, i know it inside and out but they never fix the same issues year after years and just introduce new bugs that you have to upgrade to fix and then they produce new bugs and...
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