It is possible to record a MIDI file using a digital keyboard, and
then convert it to @file{.ly}. However, human players are not
rhythmically exact enough to make a MIDI to LY conversion trivial.
-When invoked with quantizing (@code{-s} and @code{-d} options)
+When invoked with quantizing (@option{-s} and @option{-d} options)
@command{midi2ly} tries to compensate for these timing errors, but is not
very good at this. It is therefore not recommended to use @command{midi2ly}
for human-generated midi files.
@item -l, --language=LANG
use LANG for pitch names, e.g. 'deutsch' for note names in German.
+@item --loglevel=@var{loglevel}
+Set the output verbosity to @var{loglevel}. Possible values are @code{NONE},
+@code{ERROR}, @code{WARNING}, @code{PROGRESS} (default) and @code{DEBUG}.
+
@item --lxml
use the lxml.etree Python package for XML-parsing; uses less memory and cpu time.