I believe this stems from using $ rather than #, since this will insert
literally c' and cause the apostrophe to be parsed twice. I'm away from my
computer right now so can't actually test the example.

Saul

On Fri, Sep 13, 2024, 10:58 AM Yoshiaki Onishi <[email protected]> wrote:

> Dear LilyPond Community,
>
> In the interest of learning more about Scheme as used in LilyPond (and
> learning LilyPond in general!), I am currently in the process of making a
> shortcut function that handles the artificial harmonic notation of string
> instruments instead of typing "<note note \harmonic >"However, something
> must be wrong with the way I am handling \transpose in the scheme code, and
> there are some instances of the artificial harmonics that don't render
> correctly. Code (as tiny as I could manage!) and screenshot attached. I'd
> be grateful in advance if anyone could enlighten me on this.
>
> (Context: I am/was a Finale user with some coding background who
> rediscovered the LilyPond's goodness and this is week 3 of learning it
> together with students at the university I work. Part of me wished there
> was a way to specify the interval of transposition by some kind of interval
> name followed by a direction, rather than "frompitch topitch"...but I know
> this has some intricacies with absolute vs relative pitch notation...)
>
> Thanks in advance!
> Yoshi
>
> =====
>
> \version "2.24.4"
> % I tried to use (make-relative) macro to see if it helped with anything,
> but to no avail.
> hf = #(define-music-function (note1) (ly:music?)
>         #{ < #note1 \transpose c f $note1 \harmonic > #}
>         )
> {
>   \time 3/4
>   \relative c'
>   {c'16 \hf b \hf bes \hf a \hf as \hf g \hf fis \hf f \hf e \hf es \hf d
> \hf des | \hf c \hf b }
> }
>
> [image: image.png]
>
>
>

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