On Friday 06 Jun 2003 5:39 pm, Clemens Ladisch wrote: > > I took a look at Scala, which is a tool for calculating and > > setting tunings. The problem with it (from our perspective) is > > that it's _too_ simple and flexible: it represents a scale as > > simply a set of tunings per octave, without any information about > > which notes are which (for example, as far as it's concerned the > > default MIDI tuning consists of 12 equal semitones and nothing > > more, whereas to represent and edit that we still need to know > > that certain notes are "in scale" and others have accidentals, > > etc). > > I guess Scala acts this way because a set of 12 tuning values is > what most MIDI synthesizers actually support when it comes to > customizing tuning.
That's not quite what I meant, I think. Scala allows you to define any number of pitches per octave and it doesn't care about MIDI (except in MIDI-specific parts of the program). It's just that it doesn't distinguish between the pitches in any useful way -- there is no information about them besides their raw pitch data. It doesn't know a C is a C. I think. Chris ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Etnus, makers of TotalView, The best thread debugger on the planet. Designed with thread debugging features you've never dreamed of, try TotalView 6 free at www.etnus.com. _______________________________________________ Rosegarden-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] - use the link below to unsubscribe https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/rosegarden-devel
