Hello,

in general it’s helpful if you always include the list in the addressees, except for really private messages. You needn’t be afraid of increasing the traffic on ly-user. For example, someone else might comment on your question ending the first paragraph below.

Yours, Simon

Am 26.03.2015 um 00:57 schrieb Ralph D. Jeffords:
Simon, Disregard the last message ( I messed up). Anyway, thanks for the quick response. The essay on writing readable tuplets was quite interesting. The documentation mentions nothing about the intricacies of using tuplets---why isn't there a link to this article from the section 2.1.7 of the Learning Manual where tuplets are first discussed?

Even before I read the essay I had some second thoughts that \tuplet 7/4 { c16 ... } might be clearer to the player if annotated as \tuplet 7/8 { c32 ... } since 7 is closer to 8 than to 4 (i.e., I anticipated the "Nearness Rule"). I also found that certain arpeggios which appeared in a bassoon composition of mine ( I just downloaded LilyPond about 10 days ago, knowing nothing about it before, and learned enough of the basics to engrave that composition) seem easier to read if the notes are nominal 16ths rather than following the "Mathematical Rule:"

{ c,,8( \tuplet 5/2 { g'16 c ef g c ) } }

{ df8( \tuplet 7/2 { f16 bf  df f  bf  df f~) } }

So definitely there is a need for flexibility in using tuplets.

I am definitely impressed with LilyPond's capabilities and the input language (I was a heavy user of LaTeX in my life before retirement, so I am a fan of WYSIWYM tools).

Sincerely,
Ralph D. Jeffords

P.S. A bit about myself: I was a Research Computer Scientist before I retired, but I'm also a bassoonist and even play the piano a bit (my mother was a piano teacher).




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