It is amazing, what PMX can do.

The most important use cases for 128th notes seem alredy to be covered by PMX.

And I wonder whether there exists any piece of music, which contains a combination of lone 128th notes and rests.

It might be difficult to identify all these special case in the MusicXML file. But XML2PMX will always produce a PMX-file as result , which you then can manipulate.

Regards,
Dieter

Am 15.12.2016 um 16:35 schrieb Don Simons:
I wrote

Unfortunately, I don't think there's any way to trick
PMX into doing g6.g.
I was wrong, there is a way: g3x2dn g

So we have found ways to get PMX to produce most flavors of 128th notes, as
long as it's inside a beam (together with at least one other note).

To progress any further than this, it's not clear whether it would take more
programming effort on Dieter's part in XML2PMX to make XML2PMX
128th-note-capable within this restriction, or on my part in PMX to extend
"normal" input notation using 5 or 7 for a 128th, and then either (1)
internally take advantage of the xtuplet tricks, or (2) go all the way,
which would involve completely revamping PMX's time accounting. To be
realistic, there's no chance at all I'd go route (2), and only a tiny chance
for route (1).

--Don



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Dr. Dieter Glötzel
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