On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 02:51:59PM -0600, Carl Sorensen wrote: > On 4/29/10 2:42 PM, "Graham Percival" <gra...@percival-music.ca> wrote: > > >> c\chord #'(4 1 3 5) > > > > I'm not entirely comfortable about have 4 1. > > I'm totally comfortable with #'(4 1 3 5). I can easily parse that so that > steps that come before 1 in the list are an octave down from the current > pitch.
Huh. I thought 4 1 3 5 was supposed to be a first-inversion chord, but instead you were thinking of F C E G ? on first glance, that seems like an odd chord, but as a string player I get nervous when there's only two notes at once, let alone four. How would you indicate a highly-separated chord? Such as (absolute mode) d f' d'' a''' > I'd prefer, if we need to do something, to do > > #'(4, 1 3 5), i.e. use the octave indicators we already have. Hmm. I don't know... mixing apostrophies and commas with numbers seems odd. Cheers, - Graham _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list lilypond-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel