2010/10/20 Janek Warchoł <lemniskata.bernoull...@gmail.com>: > I've finally read all this and i'm still not convinced, because these > dicsussions don't mention my idea at all (i suggest that numbers 3, 5, 6, 7, > 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17 etc. should become valid durations, and work > like the familiar 1, 2 , 4, 8, 16 etc.). Nevertheless, i think i should put > this on hold (unless someone wants to discuss privately) - maybe my english > is not good enough to explain this...
Your idea is interesting, but *very* un-LilyPond-ish in its logic. I couldn't explain it better (and certainly not in English!), but maybe in a few years you'll understand what I mean ;-) You may think of LilyPond as a language (that is now almost 15-years old, which is a long, long time). Of course, like every language, it can evolve, but it evolves very slowly and everything that changes, does so for a reason. A change like what you propose is quite a big and sudden modification, which not everybody may feel comfortable with. Bernardo: for four years, I have never ever written \times 2/3 { }, since I read the following mail from Mats, and the snippet he posted: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/lilypond-user/2007-01/msg00503.html http://lsr.dsi.unimi.it/LSR/Item?id=328 What I use in my code is: \t { c d e } instead of \times 2/3 { c d e } \tt { c d e f g } instead of \times 4/5 { c d e f g } \ttt { c d e f g a } instead of \times 4/6 \ttt { } instead of \times 4/7, etc. It is *very* quick to type. I mean, *very* *very* quick. That's when I finally understood how powerful LilyPond really is, and how foolish I was to ask the developers to adapt Lily to my needs, where *I* could adapt it myself just the way I wanted. GLHF Valentin _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user