Begin forwarded message: From: Shane Brandes <sh...@grayskies.net<mailto:sh...@grayskies.net>> Date: 31 March 2011 23:18:35 GMT+01:00 To: James Lowe <james.l...@datacore.com<mailto:james.l...@datacore.com>> Subject: Re: no natural sign when clef changes
The terminal f if natural requires a natural sign regardless of that clef change. Other wise, and being the same pitch as the previous instance it will perforce have the weight of a sharped note. Probably not the most common thing to see, but there you are. Remember it is always better to over inform than confuse, but here it is just a normal cancellation. Shane On Thu, Mar 31, 2011 at 6:04 PM, James Lowe <james.l...@datacore.com<mailto:james.l...@datacore.com>> wrote: hello James. On 31 Mar 2011, at 22:25, "Bernhard Ott" <bernhard....@gmx.net<mailto:bernhard....@gmx.net>> wrote: Dear all, IMHO there should be a natural sign showing the f' after the clef-change: am I wrong? music = \relative c' { c8 d e fis c d e f c8 d e fis \clef "alto" c d e f } \score { << { \new Staff #(set-accidental-style 'modern-cautionary 'Staff) \music } { \new Staff #(set-accidental-style 'default 'Staff) \music } } hmmm...my Read says nothing but Stone says "If a clef changes within a measure and the same note occurs before and after the clef change, the accidental must be repeated." However were this f an octave higher I'd say no natural (cancellation) is needed. So is this pitch being judged as higher just because it is 'higher' in the staff or is it really an octave higher? Otherwise it ought to have a natural by default. That's my rather on the fence take :) James _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org<mailto:lilypond-user@gnu.org> http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user