Hi
Lilypond allows you to get the notations for the real music.
 I was thinking of a new feature for users -
Allowing them to create a new music.
With notations, it would be new and innovative way, which can catch
everyone's attention.


On Thu, Mar 7, 2019, 11:59 PM Urs Liska <li...@openlilylib.org> wrote:

>
>
> Am 7. März 2019 16:54:33 MEZ schrieb David Wright <
> lily...@lionunicorn.co.uk>:
> >On Thu 07 Mar 2019 at 19:32:27 (+0530), AKSHITA TYAGI wrote:
> >> I mean like there are files in MIDI and for that we can get
> >notations.
> >> But we can also use those stored notations as input and get real
> >music as
> >> output.
> >> Like we give 2 options-
> >> 1.music to notations (the usual one)
> >> 2.notations to music- In which we can give user the notations to
> >enter and
> >> he/she will get to listen to the music generated by those notations.
> >
> >I'm getting very confused by the terminology in this thread.
> >So far we have:
> >
> >MIDI files
> >notations (stored)
> >real music
> >music
> >notation (given) to enter to something
> >translations of notations (stored)
> >audio
> >lyrics
> >suggestions of notations (popping up)
> >
> >I understand the following:
> >
> >M) MIDI files with the filename foo.mid or foo.midi
> >L) LilyPond source with the filename foo.ly
> >P) LilyPond program source with filenames like foo.scm and bar.ly
> >                        (leaving aside binaries)
> >S) Scores, varying from a Bach manuscript to printed editions of the
> >same
> >J) Real music which I hear in the concert hall or off the radio/MP3
> >player
> >G) Synthesised music which I hear when I play MIDI files on various
> >devices
> >
> >LilyPond can do L→S and L→M using various fragments of P.
> >Frescobaldi does much the same, displaying L and S on the screen.
> >midi2ly does M→basic L, and I've tried Rosegarden for this too.
> >
> >I think programs exist that can turn a scanned S into a proprietary
> >program's version of L, say, a .sib file.
>
> More generally: from scanned sheet music to MusicXML, from which it can be
> converted to LilyPond source files. Both steps need manual proofreading.
>
> Urs
>
> >
> >Given those terms, I can't quite figure out what's being discussed
> >here.
> >
> >> On Thu, Mar 7, 2019, 5:20 PM Karlin High <karlinh...@gmail.com>
> >wrote:
> >>
> >> > If replies to lilypond-user messages are only addressed to the
> >sender,
> >> > the rest of the list will not see them. Please include
> >> > lilypond-user@gnu.org as a TO or CC address in future messages. A
> >GSoC
> >> > discussion requires input from others besides me.
> >> >
> >> > On 3/7/2019 3:42 AM, AKSHITA TYAGI wrote:
> >> > > Translating to real music- like we input the notations and get
> >music as
> >> > > output. For that maybe we can reverse the program or we can
> >create a new
> >> > > library which stores the translation of the notations maybe a bit
> >> > > complicated but worth trying I think.
> >> > > Maybe we can add more features and make it look better as display
> >it is
> >> > > translated to both audio and lyrics.
> >> > > And pop up with suggestions of notations.
> >> > > And for more languages we can add on more languages in the
> >library.
> >> > > Because India and China are one of the top most countries that
> >are found
> >> > > of music.
> >> >
> >> > The Frescobaldi editor for LilyPond has a MIDI player. It plays the
> >MIDI
> >> > files made by LilyPond for the given notation. Would your feature
> >for
> >> > translating to real music be something like that?
> >
> >Cheers,
> >David.
> >
> >_______________________________________________
> >lilypond-user mailing list
> >lilypond-user@gnu.org
> >https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
>
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