Francisco, \transpose was working as expected -- the horn parts were rendered the expected 5th higher. The issue was the midi output. It, too, was 'rendered' a fifth higher. I could not figure out how to use \transpose and also get the correct midi output. David Kastrup explained how \transpose works and how \transposition then affects midi output only, which is what I wanted, which is the 'relationship' I mentioned. Of course, were I old-school I could enter the horn part a 5th higher directly and then use \transposition to get correct midi output. But \transpose is a great feature that lets me input notes in concert pitch and I like that.
Thanks, Guy On Jan 31, 2013, at 2:42 PM, Francisco Vila wrote: > > El 30/01/2013 17:23, "Guy Stalnaker" <[email protected]> escribió: > > > > Thanks everyone who replied. I understand the relationship between > > /transpose and /transposition now. FYI the proper commands that produce the > > expected outcome is: > > > > /transpose f c' { > > /transposition c { > > } > > } > > > > > Yes but transposition does not operate on an expression given as an argument > like transpose does. Also, it can be changed during music. > > Paco > _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
