Dear Maurizio, I've been pointed recently to this interesting discussion, thank you for the clear explanations. Wish I would have spotted it earlier, as I wanted to generate notes from Chords in MuseScore.
I ended up following a similar line of thought, converting a pitch offset (in semitones) to a tpc offset. Nevertheless, as I am interested in handling most common chords notations, and not any intervals, I thought I could simplify the interpretation by going in general for the just/augmented interval but for a few that are usually minor/diminished (3, 6, 10). If I take a table notation as in the post you refer to that would show like: In javascript/QML that looks like: (https://github.com/berteh/musescore-chordsToNotes/blob/master/chordsToNotes.qml#L133) Result can be seen/heard in the musescore file "Chord Chard after Generation" (https://github.com/berteh/musescore-chordsToNotes/blob/master/test/Chord_Chart_afterGeneration.mscz). Kindly let me know what you think of this simplification! Berteh. -- View this message in context: http://dev-list.musescore.org/More-thoughts-on-Figured-Bass-realisation-tp7579405p7579436.html Sent from the MuseScore Developer mailing list archive at Nabble.com. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Mscore-developer mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mscore-developer
