Hi Simon, > – I think the preference one will take also depends on musical style: a piece > of renaissance vocal music uses so few leaps greater than a fourth that the > advantage of relative in typing is huge and it’s ‘error-pronity’ small. On > the other extreme, a piano piece by George Crumb would probably a showcase > for where absolute mode is at its best, if you get my point.
Agreed! And since most of the music I write is my own — and hence closer to Crumb than Compere — absolute mode almost always wins the day. > How about modifying these as >> split = […] There were, some time ago, enough problems with these functions interacting with relative mode and chords (cf. the archive thread between David K. and myself) that I’d rather not fix what isn’t currently broken. ;) > This should reduce confusion here. > So, no reason for a crusade :-) You’d think so… but it was that ridiculous problem with those functions + relative mode + chord notation that finally camel-strawed me. Look, I’m glad others like \relative mode. I just won’t use it — I’ve been burned far too often — and won’t recommend it to others. Cheers, Kieren. ________________________________ Kieren MacMillan, composer ‣ website: www.kierenmacmillan.info ‣ email: [email protected] _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
