Dear Henrik:
I'm greatly enjoying using abcMus version 2.0, particularly the multi-
voice MIDI file creation. I have a wish-list item which could improve
playback and MIDI file timing of multiple-gracenote sequences as occur
in Highland bagpipe music (my main abc application). This might also
Nevertheless, everyone's ideas are welcome
last time I was using abc for creating some midi file with several
voices with the same notes (to get a bigger sound)
When I used abcm2ps for viewing the note, I realized there isn't
in the standard, nor in abcm2ps (it seems) an option to avoit
printing
On Fri, 6 Jun 2003, Forgeot Eric wrote:
When I used abcm2ps for viewing the note, I realized there isn't
in the standard, nor in abcm2ps (it seems) an option to avoit
printing / displaying a part. I think it would be relevant with
the %%staves option
abcpp is there to help you! Have a look
Hello,
at last I managed to convince Joerg Anders to include ABC support in his
wonderful Note Editor
(http://tan.informatik.tu-chemnitz.de/~jan/noteedit/noteedit.html)!!!
There you are some excerpts from our email exchange:
On Wed, 4 Jun 2003, Guido Gonzato wrote:
I'm very happy you're
Ewan E. Macpherson wrote:
To allow for this, here is my suggestion: abcMus would use a (user
editable) file containing a list of gracenote timing templates.
But this only solves the problem for GHB music. It does not solve
the general problem of for instance:
AB | c4{dc} BA |
And similar
Yes, but I found still a serious problem: You cannot
build tuplets over different long note groups:
X: 1
K: C % key signature
L: 1/4 % default length
E (3FG A A A | E (3A3/2A/2 E A |
But you can! Just use the general (p:q:r syntax, e.g.
E (3::2FG A A A | E (3::2A3/2A/2 E A |
Yes, but I found still a serious problem: You cannot
build tuplets over different long note groups:
X: 1
K: C % key signature
L: 1/4 % default length
E (3FG A A A | E (3A3/2A/2 E A |
But you can! Just use the general (p:q:r syntax, e.g.
E (3::2FG A A A | E (3::2A3/2A/2 E A |
Phil Taylor wrote:
Was that actually what he meant? It's not clear from the example,
since it doesn't have an M: field. Perhaps he just meant (3FG A
(which should already just work).
Well, then he should write (3::3FG A to be sure that it works.
Henrik Norbeck, Stockholm, Sweden
[EMAIL