Le 26 janv. 2012 à 11:00, David Kastrup a écrit : > The bad news is that absolute pitch friends would have to call the \q > function (any better name for it?) explicitly. Since q is an input > convenience, and relative pitch is also an input convenience, I don't > think that there would be much of an affected user base.
I do use absolute pitch mode, together with the q shortcut, so the affected user base is non-nil. \relative is to save characters, but `q' is more than that, it also improves to maintain and read code, so it's not surprising to see absolute mode and `q' together. Here is a real word example copied from my code base: { R2. | <sol' do'' mi''>8-"pincé" q q q q q | q q q q q q | q <sol re' si' fa''> q q <sol re' re'' si''> q | q <sol re' si' fa''> q q <sol re' re'' si''> q | q4 r2 | r8 <sol re' si' fa''> q q q q | <sol' do'' mi''>8 q q q <sol re' do''>4 <sol fa' si'> | <sol mi' do''>4 r2 | <sol' do'' mi''>8 q q q q q | q q q q q q | r2 <la' mi''>4 | <fa' mi''>8 q q q q q | q q q q r4 | } What would be the impact of your solution on this kind of code? Is it just about adding e.g. \q before the block? Nicolas _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list lilypond-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel