> On 26 Sep 2020, at 18:04, Dan Eble <[email protected]> wrote: > >> On Sep 26, 2020, at 09:41, Dan Eble <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> On Sep 26, 2020, at 08:55, Werner LEMBERG <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> >>> Despite Gould's “incorrect” verdict, here is an example from an old UE >>> edition of Liszt's “Liebestraum No. 1”, which demonstrates that ties >>> over clef changes *do* happen and make sense sometimes... >>> >>> I still think that LilyPond should support that, handling the tie like >>> a slur in this case. >> >> That's a very good example. It's hard to imagine any reasonable alternative. >> >> What kind of grob would an editor expect here? a Tie because it connects >> notes of the same pitch, or a Slur because it connects notes at different >> staff positions? (or something else?) > > I'll answer my own question. A tie from d♯ to e♭ generates a Tie grob, so > for consistency, this should be a Tie that looks like a slur.
The notes d♯ to e♭ have different pitches in the staff notation system, which cannot express E12 enharmonic equivalents, so this is slur. So it should be a slur that looks like slur.
