ACCIDENTALS 2002-10-15 01:54 pm Surely it is possible to 'tag' a note as an accidental from the keyboard rather than selecting the flat or sharp with the mouse - but I have not found out how to do it! A simple Q with probably a simple amswer - but not obvious to me. Quote Selected
Re: ACCIDENTALS Reply #1 – 2002-10-15 02:39 pm The accidental is determined by:The pitch of the note that you enter from the MIDI keyboardThe key signature of the current piece Quote Selected
Re: ACCIDENTALS Reply #2 – 2002-10-15 02:44 pm And if you are talking about the computer keyboard, you can see the keyboard shortcuts for accidentals right on the Notes menu, or by hovering the mouse over the accidental buttons on the toolbar. Quote Selected
Re: ACCIDENTALS Reply #3 – 2002-10-15 04:46 pm You can 'tag' a note as an accidental from they keyboard with the 7, 8, and 9 number keys on your number pad. 7 for natural, 8 for flat and 9 for sharp. Of course you have to hit these keys before the 'enter' key. Quote Selected
Re: ACCIDENTALS Reply #4 – 2002-10-15 05:02 pm Recently, I have noted elsewhere in the Forum (see https://forum.noteworthycomposer.com/?topic=248.msg14747#msg14747 and https://forum.noteworthycomposer.com/?topic=248.msg14815#msg14815) how the Noteworthy handling of accidentals could stand some improvement.In the case at hand, the main gotcha is that accidentals may be nullified by later insertion of barlines.Therefore, it should be possible (normal) for notes to automatically carry an accidental when entered from the MIDI keyboard.The simplest way to carry this out would be to make Force Accidentals a mode instead of a command, i.e. applying to notes entered in the future, not the existing score. Quote Selected
Re: ACCIDENTALS Reply #5 – 2002-10-16 01:55 am But - when inserting a barline, you've created a new bar (measure), so NWC's behaviour in cancelling the accidental and returning to the stated key signature is entirely correct! Quote Selected
Re: ACCIDENTALS Reply #6 – 2002-10-16 03:33 am But I like the idea of forcing accidentals while keying in the notes from a Midi keyboard. Then you can fix up/audit bar lines and accidentals later. Quote Selected
Re: ACCIDENTALS Reply #7 – 2002-10-16 05:46 pm There is a fundamental principle in interface designcalled the principle of least astonishment. When Ikey in a bunch of notes from the keyboard, sometimes Iremember to force accidentals and then add the barlines,and sometimes I don't. In the latter case, I get littlesurprises here and there. Sometimes the little surprisesaren't detected until strangers have seen the score. Thewhole idea of keying in notes is that MIDI tells NWCexactly which note is intended, including the accidental,if any. Having NWC change that note later, for whateverreason, including the accidental-cancelling rule forbarlines, violates the principle of least astonishment.It's an effect the user (me!!) wasn't expecting.Therefore, I should hear the same note I keyed in, whetherI add a barline or not. The easiest way to achieve thatis to force an accidental on all notes entered from thekeyboard. This is what I call Force Accidentals! i(mode)instead of the Force Accidentals tool. And followingalong my recent comments on accidentals, I have proposedit as an enhancement instead of a fix. And it seemslike a simple enhancement since the machinery for forcingaccidentals is already around. Quote Selected