On Sun, 2014-03-23 at 09:24 -0400, Bric wrote: > sorry about the top-post: it's because I will need to re-read this a > couple of times. The first objection that immediately comes to mind > is: Yes, I understand the sophisticated, clever, and useful algorithm > behind this now... but why in the world should it notate my B natural as > "C-flat", when my key signature is C ?? > > Like i said: you don't need to respond right away,
but I will :) my guess is that at some point a very flat key signature was set (while using the educational game?). I don't recall the circumstances when it adjusts the range of sharps and flats for you, but generally programs changing things on your behalf are a nuisance, so it is quite conservative. > I will re-read it and > explore and try to adjust my settings, such that it writes my b naturals > as plain, unaugmented, undiminished B's ! (particularly in the keys > where the B is just that) This isn't a question of "settings" - it's not a preference. For each piece you need to set the range (E-b to G-# or D-# to A-b) and then adjust it if the piece strays into more remote keys. It does do some sensible default if you start a new piece, but as you have found, if you then change what you are doing it may no longer be sensible. (Oh! and it *does* remember the last range you used for a given piece, so when you reload a piece in E-major it doesn't carry on using E-flat for D-sharp). Richard _______________________________________________ Denemo-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel
