Lumatone mapping for 1edo: Difference between revisions
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{{Novelty}} | {{Novelty}} | ||
Initially, it may seem that like [[0edo]], there is only one conceivable way to map [[1edo]] onto the Lumatone keyboard. However, since you can | Initially, it may seem that like [[0edo]], there is only one conceivable way to map [[1edo]] onto the Lumatone keyboard. However, since you can choose which axes are octaves and which are unisons, there are actually at least three, more if you set them in a way that some directions move you multiple octaves in a single key. Nevertheless, they all look identical on the lumatone mapping diagram, which does not distinguish between unisons and octaves. | ||
{{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=1|start=0|xstep=0|ystep=0}} | {{Lumatone EDO mapping|n=1|start=0|xstep=0|ystep=0}} | ||
{{Navbox Lumatone}} | {{Navbox Lumatone}} |
Latest revision as of 10:23, 8 August 2025
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This page presents a novelty topic.
It may contain ideas which are less likely to find practical applications in music, or numbers or structures that are arbitrary or exceedingly small, large, or complex. Novelty topics are often developed by a single person or a small group. As such, this page may also contain idiosyncratic terms, notation, or conceptual frameworks. |
Initially, it may seem that like 0edo, there is only one conceivable way to map 1edo onto the Lumatone keyboard. However, since you can choose which axes are octaves and which are unisons, there are actually at least three, more if you set them in a way that some directions move you multiple octaves in a single key. Nevertheless, they all look identical on the lumatone mapping diagram, which does not distinguish between unisons and octaves.
