El 14/06/14 21:47, Don Simons escribió:
Francisco is simply replacing
the normal treble clef symbol with the treblelowoct symbol, with no other
changes at all. So in his usage, middle C is still the first line below the
staff and would still be entered in PMX as c04. My current intention is to
stick to that set of rules. But I do recall from somewhere in the deep dark
past that if a singer (probably a tenor) saw that note on that staff, he
would sing the C below middle C, i.e. c03. So if we wanted to have the same
kind of relationship between note entry, position on the staff, and sounding
pitch as with all of the other clefs, then for example middle C would still
be entered as c04 but would appear in the 3rd space up in the staff, not the
first line below. When the octave clef is selected, which way should PMX
interpret the input?
--Don Simons
As you say, the G clef with the low oct means that C in the first line
below the staff IS c03. But MusixTeX doesn't understand this, its way to
use this clef is simply to substitute the symbol with \settrebleclefsymbol.
I think the best solution would be to enter the notes in PMX in its real
pitch (so the MIDI output would be right), but then it's necessary to
transpose that staff (only that staff) by an octave.
Francisco.
-------------------------------
[email protected] mailing list
If you want to unsubscribe or look at the archives, go to
http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/tex-music