Xenharmonic Wiki:MOS page style guide: Difference between revisions

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##'''Low harmonic entropy scales'''
##'''Low harmonic entropy scales'''
##'''Temperament interpretations'''
##'''Temperament interpretations'''
#'''Step ratios''' - What cent values are reached using certain step ratios? What diatonic intervals are reached this way? Subsections for specific step ratio ranges may used instead, but a good starting point is the following:
#'''Step ratios''' or '''Step ratio ranges''' - What cent values are reached using certain step ratios? What diatonic intervals are reached this way? Subsections for specific step ratio ranges may used instead, but a good starting point is the following:
##'''Simple tunings''' - Step ratios 2:1, 3:1, and 3:2
##'''Simple tunings''' - Step ratios 2:1, 3:1, and 3:2
##'''Soft tunings''' - Step ratios 4:3 and 5:3, in comparison to 3:2
##'''Soft tunings''' - Step ratios 4:3 and 5:3, in comparison to 3:2

Revision as of 22:18, 28 June 2023

This is a proposed, work-in-progress style guide for mos pages. It's highly recommended to use any templates that are mentioned, as they provide a standardized means of presenting information that is common with virtually all mosses.

As this guide can't account for every possible use case, use your best judgment to remove any sections described that aren't needed or to add any sections that aren't mentioned.

Lead section

The lead section should, at the minimum, consist of the mos infobox and the mos intro. Any other introductory info (eg, whether the mos can be thought of as a warped mos) may be added here.

Mos pages with plenty of content

The following order of sections is recommended for important mos pages.

  1. Name(s) - What is the mos called? TAMNAMS is the predominant naming scheme, but some names may come from earlier naming systems.
  2. Notation - How are intervals and note names referred to? TAMNAMS and diamond-mos is typically used, but can also include notation described by other theorists and musicians. The two subsections are recommended:
    1. Interval names
    2. Note names
  3. Theory - Is there any theory behind this mos? Sections may include:
    1. Low harmonic entropy scales
    2. Temperament interpretations
  4. Step ratios or Step ratio ranges - What cent values are reached using certain step ratios? What diatonic intervals are reached this way? Subsections for specific step ratio ranges may used instead, but a good starting point is the following:
    1. Simple tunings - Step ratios 2:1, 3:1, and 3:2
    2. Soft tunings - Step ratios 4:3 and 5:3, in comparison to 3:2
    3. Hard tunings - Step ratios 4:1 and 5:2, in comparison to 3:1
  5. Modes - What modes does the mos have? What names do they have, if any? What intervals do these modes have?
  6. Scales - What scales are there associated with this mos? This can include temperament-specific tunings (eg, meantone[7]) and modmosses.
  7. Tuning spectrum or Scale tree - A larger version of the equal tunings section of the mos infobox, showing a wider range of step ratios (and compatible equal temperaments) for the mos.
  8. Music - Are there any compositions or tracks that use this mos?
  9. See also - Are there any other pages related to this mos?
  10. External links or References - Are there any outside resources related to this mos? Did the article reference such resources?

Mos pages with sparse content

Especially for mos pages that are under-explored, it may not be necessary to add all the sections previously described. For such mosses, the following sections are recommended:

  1. Name - Add if needed.
  2. Modes
  3. Tuning spectrum or Scale tree - Add if there are temperament interpretations worth listing, or if the main content is the tuning spectrum.
  4. See also - Add if needed.
  5. External links or References - Add if needed.