On Thu, May 02, 2013 at 02:48:49PM +0100, Richard Shann wrote: > On Mon, 2013-03-11 at 13:56 -0500, Jeremiah Benham wrote: > > > BTW Jeremiah - what were the key presses you were using to input the > > > notes on your Demo video? > > > > I used A-g for the note entry, shift 0-4 for changing rhythm to be > > entered, tab to toggle on/off triplet, and ,' for octave shifting the > > notes. > > Jeremiah - this comment from you from a while back - I didn't realize > that the shift 0-4 you refer to are not default key short cuts (??? that > is as I have just tested, shift-0,1... edits the duration without > changing the prevailing duration; if this is not true for you without > setting up your own short cuts please say).
Yes. I am just using the default bindings. Shift-0,1 does not change the prevailing duration only the current notes duration. > > Looking at this, it would seem sensible to make shift-0,1... edit AND > set the prevailing duration, then you could use the entry method you > employed only setting the duration one step later. (That is, after you > enter a note name, if the duration is wrong you use the Shift-n command > which corrects it and subsequent note names put notes in using the new > duration). I am not sure what is more intuitive. Yes. This seems like a better idea. > > I am guessing that you had the shift-0, 1 ... short cuts re-assigned to > the commands Set0, Set1 ... rather than the default Change0, Change1 ... > is that right? I was hitting 1,2,3etc .. to change default. Then I would hit backspace to delete it if it is the wrong note. I have not taken the time to find a faster way. >Would that entry method work even better by re-assigning > short cuts 0, 1, ... to Set0, Set1 ...? That is, not require the Shift? Yes. I think we had this this conversation once before. The conclusion was that it interferes with midi note entry. > > > Do you ever use this note-entry method? No but I should. Jeremiah >Does anyone listening use > pc-keyboard entry - can you say what your preferred method is? > I realize it depends how familiar you are with the clef you are > transcribing from and other factors... > > Richard > > _______________________________________________ Denemo-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel
