Re: NR 1.1.2, transpose: obscure sentence

2012-01-03 Thread flup2
Hello, Here's the way I understand it (but I may be wrong, of course). Imagine you wrote a alto saxophone part, but you notated all in real sounds. You may use the \transpose command this way : \new Staff \transpose c a \mySaxvariable As you may know, alto sax transpose one sixth lower, you

Re: NR 1.1.2, transpose: obscure sentence

2012-01-03 Thread Federico Bruni
Il 03/01/2012 09:03, flup2 ha scritto: Hello, Here's the way I understand it (but I may be wrong, of course). Imagine you wrote a alto saxophone part, but you notated all in real sounds. So, following your example below, it should be notated in A. My understanding of transposing

Re: NR 1.1.2, transpose: obscure sentence

2012-01-03 Thread Carl Sorensen
Federico Bruni fedelogy at gmail.com writes: NR 1.1.2 Transpose, Known issues and warnings The relative conversion will not affect \transpose, \chordmode or \relative sections in its argument. To use relative mode within transposed music, an additional \relative must be placed inside

Re: NR 1.1.2, transpose: obscure sentence

2012-01-03 Thread Federico Bruni
Il 03/01/2012 18:26, Carl Sorensen ha scritto: Federico Brunifedelogyat gmail.com writes: NR 1.1.2 Transpose, Known issues and warnings The relative conversion will not affect \transpose, \chordmode or \relative sections in its argument. To use relative mode within transposed music, an

NR 1.1.2, transpose: obscure sentence

2012-01-02 Thread Federico Bruni
I'm translating the Notation Reference and I found a sentence that I can't understand (I've never used \transpose). NR 1.1.2 Transpose, Known issues and warnings The relative conversion will not affect \transpose, \chordmode or \relative sections in its argument. To use relative mode within