[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > I query only the particular reasoning behind the rationale currently > employed, especially since we occasionally get readers that pose this very > question from time to time and, thus far, I have not seen an answer to > convince me to the bottom of my heart of the fundamentals behind the method > chosen.
There is a very easy reason: the musical meaning of music expressions should be context-free. If the pitch of a note is dependent on context (the setting of \key), you cannot do anything pitch-based (eg. transposition) with musical expressions. For example, \apply #SCHEME-FUNCTION becomes a lot less useful if the pitch of a note cannot be deduced. > Being a fundamentalist at heart, I hate to see apparent redundancy in > anything, and I have to say that my heart says that to have a key including The redundancy is in the \key statement. \key can be deduced from the musical content. The key signature is a way to notate certain scales using less symbols: it is part of the notation, not of musical content. Music notation is full of strange rules, exceptions, etc. I do not want to import all the brokenness of notation into the musical representation format. > Which I am happy to go with, as I have for a number of months now... > My 3 pennyworth.... Indeed. Or you can write your own engravers that do what you suggested in your e-mail. In any case, I propose to end this discussion. -- Han-Wen Nienhuys | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.cs.uu.nl/~hanwen _______________________________________________ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user