Am Mi., 3. Okt. 2018 um 00:38 Uhr schrieb David Kastrup <d...@gnu.org>: > > Thomas Morley <thomasmorle...@gmail.com> writes: > > > Am Di., 2. Okt. 2018 um 23:17 Uhr schrieb David Kastrup <d...@gnu.org>: > > > >> So what is wrong with using \"var2" or \var.2 ? > > > > As a side note. > > > > I wasn't aware a comma works as well > > qwerty,2 = "bar" > > That's likely a side effect of comma-separated lists having been made > identical to dot-separated ones in most respects so that you can write > stuff like > > \keepWithTag violI,violII ... > > where a dot looks awkward. Feels like "don't go there" syntax, really. > > > Although, while calling it, you _must_ use the dot > > \new Lyrics \lyricmode { \qwerty.2 } > > That's sort of ugly, indeed. Probably because , can be an octave > marker, so if the identifier is a pitch... But of course a similar > reasoning would hold when the identifier is a duration followed by a > dot. > > And admittedly, with the _current_ grammar, treating '.' and ',' equal > in that context does not trigger a warning. However, here clearly the > "hierarchical" interpretation is given rather than the "list of equals" > and so I am queasy about fudging this option into the grammar when I > don't have a good feeling about what price may be to pay for it in > future and I don't see a real use case where that grammar would be the > preferred one. > > -- > David Kastrup
It was an observation, not a proposal. Speaking only for myself, I can perfectly life without the comma-syntax in definitions and their calls. The dot feels more natural for me anyway. But again, that's only me. Cheers, Harm _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user