From e42bc549683d35829be1239e049845f39b17185c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: fred Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2002 21:50:09 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] lilypond-1.1.46 --- TODO | 37 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 36 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/TODO b/TODO index 4107485454..5079798708 100644 --- a/TODO +++ b/TODO @@ -10,10 +10,45 @@ Grep for TODO and ugh/ugr/urg. .* BUGS . * junk separate mudela versioning. +. * petite-ouverture time sig size. . * PostScript . * header for PS enteredby = "bla " . * ps/lily.ps see comments. -. * down tuplet spanner. +. * By the way, I'm not sure the translation of 'C, G, and F clef' +> should include Alto, Violin, Bass . +[..] + +I understand your point. It should be changed. + + +> +> The terms C-clef, G-clef, F-clef stand for the signs, being +> mutated forms of a C, a G and an F. +> +> The terms Violin Clef etc. stand for the signs being used in +> special positions on the staff. +> +> The G-clef-sign indicates g' on the line around which the +> snake centers. It is a Violin Clef if it is centered around the +> second line (from below), and a French Violin Clef if it is +> centered around the lowest. +> +> The C-clef indicates c' on the line that gets +> 'pinched' by it. It is a Soprano, Mezzosoprano (English?), Alto, Tenor +> and (don't remember exactly, maybe Baritone) Clef, depending on +> the line (from highest to lowest). +> +> The F-clef-sign indicates f on the line between +> the two dots. If it's on the second line from above, it is called +> Bass Clef. If it's on the middle line, it is called (maybe +> Baritone) Clef too, because it indicates the same pitches as the +> C-Clef on the highest line. So, you could write an Alto Clef by +> putting the F-clef sign on the lowest line (but that's _very_ +> uncommon). +> +> Sorry, this is written very messy because I'm in a hurry, +> but I hope you understand what I want to say. +> . * didot / big point. . * devise standard for functioning of Vertical_align_element. . * midi key. -- 2.39.5