Try to check also here:

http://music-encoding.org/tools/

There is a list of tools (including the exceptional Verorio as Urs
suggested) that you could consider.

Ciao, g.

On 7 November 2016 at 13:43, bb <bb-543...@telecolumbus.net> wrote:

> The complete vex-family ( i do not know if that is linked from vexflow):
>
> vexflow A JavaScript library for rendering music notation and guitar
> tablature.
>
> vextab A VexTab Parser for VexFlow https://github.com/0xfe/vextab
>
> vexchords JavaScript Chord Charts https://github.com/0xfe/vexchords
>
> vexwarp Audio Time Stretching and Pitch Shifting https://github.com/0xfe/
> vexwarp
>
>
>
> On 07.11.2016 12:50, Chris Yate wrote:
>
> BB that is beautiful
>
>
> On Mon, 7 Nov 2016 at 11:47 bb <bb-543...@telecolumbus.net> wrote:
>
>> May be that is what you lokk for?
>>
>> http://www.vexflow.com/
>>
>> http://www.vexflow.com/vextab/tutorial.html
>>
>> Regards BB
>>
>> On 07.11.2016 12:25, Chris Yate wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, 7 Nov 2016 at 11:10 Gerard McConnell <gerine...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Hello,
>> About 10 years ago I wrote some Java applets which allow a user to test
>> their understanding of intervals (http://homepage.eircom.net/~
>> gerfmcc/interval.html and triads (http://homepage.eircom.net/~
>> gerfmcc/chords.html) and minor scales (http://homepage.eircom.net/~
>> gerfmcc/pitchEtc2.html).  They work well, but it seems that Java applets
>> are now no longer the best way to make programs available on web pages.  It
>> seems that the HTML5 canvas is most common now.   I'm not an experienced
>> programmer but I think the logic for generating the tests should be easy
>> enough to transpose from java to javascript, however for display I'm
>> wondering what a reasonably simple way to transform the note data into
>> music notation is.  I used transparent .gifs for the original programs and
>> shifted them into place, but I suspect that Lilypond or something similar
>> would be better.   No doubt people here have worked on this sort of problem
>> before, so any advice would be greatly appreciated.
>>
>> Thanks for any help,
>> Gerard McConnell
>>
>>
>> Lilypond can render to PNG which would probably be good for this task. I
>> don't think it's the right thing for dynamic music creation though.
>>
>> I'm not quite sure what you are looking to do but if you wanted to create
>> the music dynamically, I might render them in Lilypond, chop them into tiny
>> bitmaps and then render them within the Canvas, using some custom
>> positioning logic in Javascript.
>>
>> By the way... I hope you are aware that the Javascript language has
>> almost nothing to do with Java?!  That said, I don't know how tricky your
>> logic is.
>>
>> Chris
>>
>>
>>
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