please read the rules, it will answer all your questions!

  • Get the best VPN on the market with 66% Discount!
Software, Windows
ScanScore Professional 3.0.8 screenshot
P2P | Date: 2024.12 | Size: 194.8 MB
Scan, play and edit sheet music quickly and easily with ScanScore. Simply download ScanScore and use your smartphone, tablet or a scanner to scan your sheet music and play it back to you. And you can just as easily transpose your score, export your notes to almost any music program and edit them further.

Wouldn't it be fantastic if every piece of sheet music had a play button?
Now with ScanScore, it has!

- Scan printed and digital sheet music
- Play back your score
- Make edits and corrections to the notes
- Transpose notes, staves or the whole score
- Export your score for further processing in another program*
* Like MuseScore, Dorico, Sibelius, FORTE, Capella, Notion or Finale

Scan your sheet music and listen to it.
- Scan the sheet music with your preferred scanning method
- Let it play the notes for you
- Practice your voice or your instrumental solo before an orchestra, ensemble or choir rehearsal

Scan your sheet music and transpose it.
- Transpose the whole score or just single staves directly in ScanScore
- Change the key and make it easier to play or sing along
- Adapt the score to another instrument
- Print your transposed score with just a few clicks

Scan your sheet music and edit it.
- Edit your score easily with ScanScore's correction tools
- Export your notes (at the click of a button) to almost any music app via MusicXML or MIDI
- There you can simplify, add staves, change the layout and much more!

What makes ScanScore the right music scanning software for you...

User-friendly – scan sheet music and get fast results
- The user interface is very easy to understand
- You can digitize your sheet music within a few minutes, without frustration

Extensive, convenient correction and editing options
- The correction of scanning errors is extensive and convenient
- The playback feature makes finding errors easy

Flexible import possibilities with recognition of PDF files
- You can scan or read in files that you have digitally on your computer
- Even PDF files, for example from the IMSLP library, are no problem for ScanScore.

Significantly improved note recognition
ScanScore works with the newest detection algorithms to produce excellent results.

Export to all programs as MusicXML or MIDI
You can export your notes (at the click of a button) to almost any music program via the MusicXML or MIDI interface.



download from free file storage
click to show download links
download from any file hoster with just one LinkSnappy account
download from more than 100 file hosters at once with LinkSnappy.

comments

  Contributor 24.02.2021 422 549
+23614
Rapidgator | Nitroflare | KatFile
  Member 12.12.2023 709 4414
+18953
Rapidgator | KatFile | NitroFlare
  Resident 21.06.2018 495 16624
+9949
  Resident 21.04.2014 1807
+394
Since 1998 these systems have improved a lot.

I believe this will work perfectly when AI is finely tuned to understand musical scores. By applying logic within a logarithmic scale as it is used on the Richter scale to measure earthquakes, depending on the scanning condition, the system warns us utilizing different colors of anything wrong so we can correct it, and so the system is fed by millions of users.

Everything it cannot interpret and ask us what decisions should be made regarding elements like ghost notes or nuances it doesn't comprehend in the sheet music. To achieve this level of processing, it will need to be online and supported by significantly faster computational systems. However, I doubt this will be realized soon.

These paper recognition algorithms have been in use since 1998 and have never functioned reliably; they tend to make more mistakes than they do successes—perfection remains elusive. While AI excels at processing text with impressive accuracy, even in languages like Russian and Chinese, music is essentially a form of text as well, albeit in a different realm that is, believe me, much more constrained, the hardest part for AI will be understanding the rhythm, not the height of the frequencies.

Regarding speech recognition for transcription, people around the world have been expressing concerns about its accuracy. As of 2025, it still contains numerous flaws, including semantic errors and issues with word agreement, as well as confusion between homophones. If there were AI logic integrated into the system, it could potentially reduce these mistakes, although it's important to note that AI can also make errors.

If anyone is considering developing this project, I would love to be involved.

Spread the Word