Well, since thats a MusiXTeX thing, and because its a little hard to find, you can be excused for not knowing it. In MusiXTeX you can always refer to a pitch with a number rather than a letter, and the number is exactly the vertical position on whatever staff you are using, counting the bottom line as 0. When you use this for a pitch, it wont be transposable, but it also wont affect the transpose register. That second thing is a BIG advantage when you use it in in-line TeX, because PMX doesnt interpret any in-line TeX, so wont know if you changed the octave register by using a letter in in-line TeX.
--Don From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jill-Jênn VIE Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2010 8:03 AM To: Werner Icking Music Archive Subject: Re: [TeX-Music] Glissando Le 10 juin 10 à 16:37, Don Simons a écrit : I'm not sure what you are comparing. Your example to mine? I tested the same line with K and with 5. I don't know what 5 meant. But I'll RTFM :) If that's it, lots of things are different. For starters, your K refers to a pitch on a d, the middle line of bass clef (which BTW is only true because it hasn't been altered by an earlier octave change in the transpose register), while my 5 refers to the c above middle c in treble clef. And even for the same length parameter, since it's given in \noteskips, the printed length will be affected by both the note value and by \elemskip, and \elemskip is probably different in the two examples. Okay, thanks again, Don ;) I don't know if you guys have been playing Pokémon (maybe not xD) but that sheet is for: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zn78zfkncAw Original: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8oVusO6xb-U -- Jill-Jênn http://mickay.jill.free.fr/score/
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