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From: | James E. Bailey |
Subject: | Re: yet another chord question |
Date: | Mon, 9 Feb 2009 23:32:45 +0100 |
El 09.02.2009, a las 23:16, Brett Duncan escribió:
No, that actually wasn't it. I usually use deutsch.ly and the source I copied was from the documentation. The output is the same between <c e g b dis> and <c e g bes dis>, it was the <c e g b dis'> that mattered. I don't know why, but it's apparently important.James E. Bailey wrote:I'd like to have a chord that is C-10. I have myChordDefinitions = { <c e g b dis>-\markup \super {-10} } And then, of course the requisite myChordExceptions = #(append (sequential-music-to-chord-exceptions myChordDefinitions #t) ignatzekExceptions) myChordInit = { \set chordNameExceptions = #myChordExceptions } I have my very simple input file of Chord = \chords { \myChordInit c:9+ } music = { c'2 } \score { << \Chord \music >> }So why is the output not changed? The chord name chart shows me that <c e g b dis> is a #9 chord. What I see is the default output of a #9 chord.Because c:9+ would be the chord <c e g bes dis> rather than <c e g b dis>, so it doesn't match your chord definition.Brett
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