Hi Jacques, Two main ways: 1. Direct entry one spine at a time, and then the assemble tool, or 2. MIDI keyboard entry via another notation programme, then conversion MIDI to Humdrum, then run through a filter program that predicts the correct spelling of enharmonic equivalents, then correction of same by hand.
I threw a big party when my main corpus (nearly 500 files) was encoded. Cheers, Frauke > On 30 Jun 2020, at 19:25, Frauke Jurgensen <frauk...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On Tue, 30 Jun 2020, 19:09 Jacques Menu, <imj-muz...@bluewin.ch> wrote: > Hello Frauke, > > How do you produce the Humdrum data sets? > > JM > > > Le 30 juin 2020 à 19:04, Frauke Jurgensen <frauk...@gmail.com> a écrit : > > > > Hi, > > > > I use Humdrum a lot, and have written a basic hum2lily conversion tool, > > which I am using to prepare my edition of the Buxheim Organ Book. It’s > > quite specialised for my particular application, and not terribly > > sophisticated at the moment. > > > > Cheers, > > Frauke > > > >> On 30 Jun 2020, at 16:28, Jacques Menu <imj-muz...@bluewin.ch> wrote: > >> > >> Hello folks, > >> > >> I’ve been wondering : is Humdrum **kern in wide use, and do you know of > >> any work or application involving both Humdrum **kern and LilyPond? > >> > >> Thanks! > >> > >> JM > >> > >> > > >