home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
BBS in a Box 7
/
BBS in a Box - Macintosh - Volume VII (BBS in a Box) (January 1993).iso
/
Files
/
Util
/
T-Te
/
Tablature.cpt
/
Tablature
/
Tablature documentation
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1987-03-22
|
4KB
|
90 lines
TABLATURE
BY JOSEPH CASAZZA
Here is a fast way to type lute, guitar, or cittern tablature using
Renaissance tablature conventions. This application is a preliminary
version. It is still useful, especially for short pieces, despite the
unimplemented features.
SETTING UP DIFFERENT TYPES OF TABLATURE
The application presents you with a window for four-course tablature
in duple meter to start, but you can change setup from the menu. Meters
currently allows selection of only duple or triple, but as you can tell
I have plans for wider selection, perhaps with an automatic barline
option. Courses allows you to select tablature for a four course
instrument (cittern or guitar), a five course instrument (cittern or
guitar, or early lute), a six course instrument using a five line staff
(early French lute tablature), or a six course instrument using six lines.
These selections might also be expanded to include lutes, etc. with more
than six courses.
TYPING SPECIAL SYMBOLES
I am using a modified Geneva font to supply the special musical symbols
as follows:
Capital letter i at head of each chord produces a single stem
Capital letter t at head of each chord produces a single flag on a stem
Capital letter f at head of each chord produces a double flag on a stem
Capital letter e at head of each chord produces a triple flag on a stem
Capital letter d at head of each chord produces a single flag on a stem
with a dot
Capital letter p at head of each chord produces a double flag on a stem
with a dot
Special symbols are coming. For now dots below notes, strokes under notes,
repeat signs, barlines, double barlines, etc. will have to be added by hand
or in MacPaint.
ADDING A TITLE
You can add a title at the head of the page. Click the mouse above the
position of the head of the top chords or shift-tab back from the head
position of the first chord to get to the title field.
MOVING INSERTION POINT, EDITING
Moving around the page is pretty easy. When you are typing from the end
insertion point the cursor will automatically advance. You can click on
any letter or in a desired letter position (within the limits of the
chord spacing I have imposed) to type a new character there. At the end
insertion point you may, and after a click you must tab ahead or shift-tab
back (you can always just click somewhere else too, and if you click back
at the end insertion point--not beyond--you can continue typing normally).
Just type over the letter you have clicked on or tabbed to in order to
replace it, or hit the space bar to delete. If you haven't clicked or
tabbed out of the field, you can also backspace to delete, but you cannot
backspace between fields. (Backspacing may be desirable; please let me
know.)
FOR MAC PLUS
(This has not yet been tried, so if it fails in any way, let me know)
If you have a Mac Plus keyboard you can move in other ways. The up arrow
will move you up along the chords on the page from your current position,
even between staffs, and the down arrow will move you down the chords.
The right and left arrows will move you across the chords from your current
position, and will wrap around to the next or previous staff. The only
limit on this motion is that you cannot move to a position beyond the final
insertion point. If you have completely filled a page, your motion is
almost unrestricted.
SAVING AND PRINTING, TYPING MORE THAN ONE SCREEN
Although you cannot save your work or print from the File menu, you can
do a screen dump to the printer with control-shift-4 or save to a MacPaint
file with control-shift-3. The latter is suggested for cleaning up anything
you want to print. You also cannot yet type more than a half page at a
time, but simply do a MacPaint screen dump using command-shift-3 to save
your first half page and then choose New from the File menu and go on
typing; you can cut and paste from your MacPaint saved versions to make
larger selections. Scrolling will be implemented soon.
MORE TO COME ?
If you think this is a worthwhile project or have suggestions, please write.
If I get something I like I may try to improve performance by rewriting the
application in Pascal or assembly language (I started this a while ago in
Basic, so I decided to continue in Basic for now). My address is in the
"About Tablature" dialog.