On Sun, Jan 15, 2023 at 3:49 PM Hans Åberg <haber...@telia.com> wrote:
> As the full number of Turkish makam is very large, perhaps too many to > have in this file, there might be a turkish-makam-extended for the less > common ones. > Being it said that I'm not clear what the harm is when a file of this kind(*) gets big, I would like to bring up that "-extended" is a naming pattern that is likely to create trouble, because there's no obvious rule, given makam "X" to know in which file it belongs. In turn this will make the separation annoying for users, and will create potentially annoying discussion among contributors when a missing makam needs to be added. If the file must be broken up (and again, I'm doubtful it has to), it seems to me that it would serve everybody much better if the naming was more descriptive of the content --> I don't know anything about Turkish music, but I'll offer a bit of wild speculation with the intention of providing an example of how the reasoning goes. Please do look past the specifics, and try to see the flavour of the argument. For the sake of argument, one might use a historical classification, or a structural keyword. Obviously it might be useful to draw from established systems, if there is one. All this being said, I just read there are hundreds of makams, which makes me wonder whether it wouldn't be more effective to provide a simple method to indicate the makam of a piece at the start of the score, for all but the most common N ones (maybe N could be somewhere between 50 and 100?). I'm thinking one might prepare a command that would take appropriate arguments (maybe a name and the interval sequence?) and establish that from then onwards that is the current makam in use? --> end of wild speculation (*) "this kind": - effectively a big long list/dictionary of values - clearly the case that the values will never change (beyond what will be bugfixes of the "clerical error" kind) L -- Luca Fascione