t :
On Sat, Mar 13, 2021 at 9:14 PM Kieren MacMillan <mailto:kieren_macmil...@sympatico.ca>> wrote:
Hi Carl!
>> My music entry is done 99% by MIDI input, so I type almost no commas or
apostrophes.
> Can you tell me how you do your MIDI input? I'd like to do
d it, and transpose to alto clef
> with fewer than 10 keystrokes.
>
> Have you tried Frescobaldi and MIDI entry?
>
No, I'm afraid not. I never learned a keyboard instrument, and I don't
think I have the time at present to add that to my list. I really do
understand why absolute
Hi Ralph,
>> 1. I use Frescobaldi.
>
> Wow. I missed this somehow. I can see why you use absolute values
> exclusively, Kieren. I'm almost exclusively transcribing and transposing
> fiddle tunes. I do a lot of entry from sheet music, and do a lot of
> proofreading, then transposing. Not terrib
On Sat, Mar 13, 2021 at 9:14 PM Kieren MacMillan <
kieren_macmil...@sympatico.ca> wrote:
> Hi Carl!
>
> >> My music entry is done 99% by MIDI input, so I type almost no commas or
> apostrophes.
> > Can you tell me how you do your MIDI input? I'd like to
Hi Carl!
>> My music entry is done 99% by MIDI input, so I type almost no commas or
>> apostrophes.
> Can you tell me how you do your MIDI input? I'd like to do that, but I don't
> have a good workflow for it.
1. I use Frescobaldi.
2. I’ve set keyboard shortcut
Hi folks
Dmitriy contributed a new feature for MIDI input in Frescobaldi v2 some
months ago and I recently rebased his patch on master to make it work
on Frescobaldi v3 and make sure the review process could start.
As Frescobaldi developers may not have a MIDI instrument to test it (I
know
Il giorno dom 4 dic 2016 alle 9:53, Urs Liska ha
scritto:
I'm running LMDE2 (Linux Mint Debian Edition), and requesting the
Debian
Version returns 8.4. Interestingly there's exactly one other person
having expressed this problem and he also was running Debian 8.4.
So I'm pretty sure the proble
to do this manually because it's such a huge beast with
presumably countless dependencies.
So if anyone can give me a hint on how to force an upgrade or to add a
current installation *beside* the package one I'd be very glad.
Best
Urs
>
>
>
> -
> composer | sou
oth recently so I hope it
continues with the new version!
What distro are you using Urs? Just curious. What issues have you seen on
your end w/ Qt5?
-
composer | sound designer
LilyPond Tutorials (for beginners) --> http://bit.ly/bcl-lilypond
--
View this message in context:
http://l
Am 01.12.2016 um 17:59 schrieb David Kastrup:
> SoundsFromSound writes:
>
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> I just wanted to let you guys know that not long ago I uploaded some
>> tutorials showing how to setup a MIDI keyboard for MIDI input of your scores
>> (u
SoundsFromSound writes:
> Hello everyone,
>
> I just wanted to let you guys know that not long ago I uploaded some
> tutorials showing how to setup a MIDI keyboard for MIDI input of your scores
> (using Frescobaldi), as well as how to listen to your score playback, and
> also
Hello everyone,
I just wanted to let you guys know that not long ago I uploaded some
tutorials showing how to setup a MIDI keyboard for MIDI input of your scores
(using Frescobaldi), as well as how to listen to your score playback, and
also how to export MIDI. These were at the top of my most
On Fri, 02 Jan 2009 10:10:56 -0700, Andrew Hawryluk wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 2, 2009 at 2:45 AM, David Raleigh Arnold
> wrote:
>> If the spelling is related to the key according to the "chromatic
>> scale" in that key, there will be lots of time saved in nearly all
>> instances. The chromatic scale i
On Fri, Jan 2, 2009 at 2:45 AM, David Raleigh Arnold
wrote:
> If the spelling is related to the key according to the "chromatic scale"
> in that key, there will be lots of time saved in nearly all instances.
> The chromatic scale in C is c cs d eb e f fs g gs a bb b c. It can
> easily be transpos
ees from the MIDI keyboard and change it to dis by pressing
> >> CTRL-something. This is probably beyond my current skills, and it
may
> >> be just as fast to type the pitches that have unusual spellings in
a
> >> given key.
> >>
> >> This does bring up
You can use parts of LilyPondTool in your macros.
There are two important classes in your case:
1.
lilytool.macrohelp.NoteNameMap.
It is used like this:
NoteNameMap.NM.method(), that is you always call NoteNameMap.NM and not
just NoteNameMap (this again sux, but is a quite old class, from my
y
Dear Bertalan,
I don't know the NoteNameMap and Note class. Can You explain me what it is?
2009/1/1 Bertalan Fodor :
> Remember you can use lilypondtool's NoteNameMap and Note class for quite
> interesting things. Possibly for this as well.
>
>
___
li
e just as fast to type the pitches that have unusual spellings in a
>> given key.
>>
>> This does bring up the point that MIDI input can be a tremendous
>> timesaver for strongly diatonic music, but may not be as helpful for
>> highly chromatic passages.
>>
>&g
Remember you can use lilypondtool's NoteNameMap and Note class for quite
interesting things. Possibly for this as well.
___
lilypond-user mailing list
lilypond-user@gnu.org
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
s probably beyond my current skills, and it may
> be just as fast to type the pitches that have unusual spellings in a
> given key.
>
> This does bring up the point that MIDI input can be a tremendous
> timesaver for strongly diatonic music, but may not be as helpful for
> highly chr
probably beyond my current skills, and it may
be just as fast to type the pitches that have unusual spellings in a
given key.
This does bring up the point that MIDI input can be a tremendous
timesaver for strongly diatonic music, but may not be as helpful for
highly chromatic passages.
Andrew
On
Dear David,
thanks for Your answer. So, it should be possible to do this within
jedit, with a macro.
2008/12/31 David Picón Álvarez :
> I doubt such resolution is possible given that MIDI notes are given in a
> numeric form, meaning n semitones over the baseline. As far as I can tell
> MIDI is jus
r a gig you have to add the weight of
the computer or other sythesizer device. If you can live with fewer
than 4 octaves, there are even cheaper models.
Saying that anything to do with sound works well on Linux is a bit of
an exaggeration, but it's recognized out-of-the-box on Ubuntu as a MIDI
input de
Wilbert Berendsen wrote:
Op maandag 29 december 2008, schreef Andrew Hawryluk:
I believe that this is the first time that MIDI input is available
across all three major platforms (but correct me if I'm wrong).
I think you're right: Rumor does this, also quite nice, since
t I am between 2 and 3.5 times faster at entering pitches
with MIDI keyboard than by typing, so I am very happy to have this.
The biggest improvements occur when entering keyboard music in keys
with many sharps or flats.
I believe that this is the first time that MIDI input is available
across all thre
Berendsen wrote:
> Op maandag 29 december 2008, schreef Andrew Hawryluk:
>> I believe that this is the first time that MIDI input is available
>> across all three major platforms (but correct me if I'm wrong).
>
> I think you're right: Rumor does this, also quite nice,
Op maandag 29 december 2008, schreef Andrew Hawryluk:
> I believe that this is the first time that MIDI input is available
> across all three major platforms (but correct me if I'm wrong).
I think you're right: Rumor does this, also quite nice, since 2003, but only
on Linux. Fre
2008/12/29 Andrew Hawryluk :
> I believe that this is the first time that MIDI input is available
> across all three major platforms (but correct me if I'm wrong).
> Bertalan has expressed interest in including this as part of
> LilyPondTool at some point in the future, but i
times faster at entering pitches
with MIDI keyboard than by typing, so I am very happy to have this.
The biggest improvements occur when entering keyboard music in keys
with many sharps or flats.
I believe that this is the first time that MIDI input is available
across all three major platforms (but
I think Recordare has plugins or something of that nature that allow Sibelius
to output MusicXML.
Sorry, I meant to dig up the link and include that before sending. Here it
is: http://store.recordare.com/dolet3sib.html
I've never used this, so I can't verify its quality. If you go this way, I
Not being a windows user, I can't really help you with the matter of
invocation. However, on the matter of midi2ly and translating midi files
to lilypond, there has been considerable discussion on this list.
Regarding midi2ly:
I need to know everything there is to turn a MIDI file into a Lilyp
James- I'm torn on this one but my experience may help
as an example. I just finished the input of a triple
choir plus countertenor piece (handwritten score was 90
pages 13 staves) . It took me most of January to do it
in my spare time and to correct 'most' of my errors in
typing.
I then too
On 2-Feb-06, at 9:07 AM, James McFadyen (sent by Nabble.com) wrote:
The Lilypond manual isn't user-friendly enough in this respect, it
tells you what to do but doesn't give you a working example. It also
says to invoke it from the command line. Does this mean I click Start
- Run and then type
is to export the Sibelius file as a MIDI file and somehow change the MIDI file into Lilypond by so-called 'invoking'.
Like I said, I'm using Windows XP (not Linux) so would appreciate any advice anyone can give me to turn my MIDI files into Lilypond files.
View this message in contex
In short:
- Open the Cygwin shell
- Move your MIDI file to the cygwin home folder:
C:\cygwin\home\\
- Run the command:
midi2ly myfile.midi
However, read the 4th paragraph at
http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.4/Documentation/user/out-www/lilypond/Invoking-midi2ly.html#Invoking-midi2ly
You will probably
I am trying to convert a midi file into a printable score using Lilypond
2.4 in Windows XP.
Do I have to use the Cygwyn Bash Shell or is it possible to write a .ly
routine in my text editor? Whichever, I would be grateful if you could
show me an example as clarification. I have tried invo
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