On 4/5/09 4:59 PM, "Valentin Villenave" <v.villen...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 2009/4/5 Han-Wen Nienhuys <hanw...@gmail.com>:
>> Please come up with something different. I think the idea to
>> use (for example) & as a place holder is much more sane.
>
> As I suggested, if we forbid such standalone durations after anything
> else than an explicit duration, it would not break anything wrt
> whitespaces. -- But I agree that this is not quite "sane".
>
> 2009/4/5 Werner LEMBERG <w...@gnu.org>:
>>
>> OK. Then I vote for a letter like `q' as a repeater for chords. `&'
>> is a bit cumbersome to type.
>
> Well, the advantage of a non-letter char is that it's less easy to
> confuse it with a note... That being said, we already have `r',
> meaning "rest" and `s' meaning "skip"... But what does `q' mean? :-)
I guess it could mean "quote" -- as in quote the previous object.
I like the idea of having it be a key that doesn't need to be shifted, or at
least isn't likely to be in some awkward place on some language's keyboard.
I think that the following unshifted characters are available:
q, w, t, y, u, i, o, p (although \p is used for dynamics), j, k, l, z, x, v,
n, m (although \mf and \mp are used for dynamics).
= would have the right meaning, but then we'd have two different uses for a
naked = character, so I don't think it is a good idea.
None of these characters jump out at me as being optimal. I think & is
somewhat mnemonic. I think legibility should trump ease of typing, so I
guess I come down in favor of &, at least from the choices I've imagined so
far.
Of course, I still don't have any idea who is going to implement this, even
if we do agree on syntax.
Carl
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