Interval span: Difference between revisions
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Added a ‘not to be confused with’ line at the top as a temporary band aid response to the discussion in the talk page. My edit doesn’t attempt to resolve the debate about the term, it just makes all this less confusing for readers in the mean time and buys other editors time to sort it out calmly without worrying about doing readers a disservice in the mean time. |
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''' | ''Not to be confused with [[Fifthspan]], which is an unrelated concept.'' | ||
The '''span''' of an interval is a technical term referring to the [[Interval size measure|size of an interval]], typically in some logarithmic unit such as cents, octaves, or something else. The [[JIP]] can give the span of any just interval, whereas within regular temperaments, this is typically given by a [[tuning map]]. | |||
The span of some comma can be thought of as a very simple metric to measure the usefulness of the temperament vanishing that comma. This is because the formula for the [[TE simple badness|simple badness]], which is the product of the best-case tuning error and the complexity of the temperament, happens to reduce to the span of the comma in the situation where there is only one comma tempered out. | The span of some comma can be thought of as a very simple metric to measure the usefulness of the temperament vanishing that comma. This is because the formula for the [[TE simple badness|simple badness]], which is the product of the best-case tuning error and the complexity of the temperament, happens to reduce to the span of the comma in the situation where there is only one comma tempered out. | ||
Various units have been used for the span of an interval. Typically [[cents]] are used, which can be thought of as the logarithm taken to the base <math>2^{1/1200}</math>. However, in mathematical situations it is often useful to work with the log base 2, meaning units of octaves, or even simply in the natural logarithm of base e, meaning units of "[[Wikipedia:Neper|nepers]]". [[Martin Gough]] introduced the unit of a "dineper" in his work on [[Logarithmic approximants]]. | [[Interval size unit|Various units have been used for the span of an interval]]. Typically [[cents]] are used, which can be thought of as the logarithm taken to the base <math>2^{1/1200}</math>. However, in mathematical situations it is often useful to work with the log base 2, meaning units of octaves, or even simply in the natural logarithm of base e, meaning units of "[[Wikipedia:Neper|nepers]]". [[Martin Gough]] introduced the unit of a "dineper" in his work on [[Logarithmic approximants]]. For a units analysis of interval size, see [[Dave Keenan & Douglas Blumeyer's guide to RTT/Units analysis#Size of JI interval]] and the following section for [[Dave Keenan & Douglas Blumeyer's guide to RTT/Units analysis#Size of tempered interval|the size of a tempered interval]]. | ||
The term span is also used in a different mathematical sense to refer to the linear span of a set of vectors, see [[Wikipedia:Linear span|linear span]]. | |||
[[Category:Interval]] | |||
[[Category:Terms]] |
Latest revision as of 20:55, 12 December 2024
Not to be confused with Fifthspan, which is an unrelated concept.
The span of an interval is a technical term referring to the size of an interval, typically in some logarithmic unit such as cents, octaves, or something else. The JIP can give the span of any just interval, whereas within regular temperaments, this is typically given by a tuning map.
The span of some comma can be thought of as a very simple metric to measure the usefulness of the temperament vanishing that comma. This is because the formula for the simple badness, which is the product of the best-case tuning error and the complexity of the temperament, happens to reduce to the span of the comma in the situation where there is only one comma tempered out.
Various units have been used for the span of an interval. Typically cents are used, which can be thought of as the logarithm taken to the base [math]\displaystyle{ 2^{1/1200} }[/math]. However, in mathematical situations it is often useful to work with the log base 2, meaning units of octaves, or even simply in the natural logarithm of base e, meaning units of "nepers". Martin Gough introduced the unit of a "dineper" in his work on Logarithmic approximants. For a units analysis of interval size, see Dave Keenan & Douglas Blumeyer's guide to RTT/Units analysis#Size of JI interval and the following section for the size of a tempered interval.
The term span is also used in a different mathematical sense to refer to the linear span of a set of vectors, see linear span.