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WikispacesArchive>Mike Battaglia |
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| = ARCHIVED WIKISPACES DISCUSSION BELOW =
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| '''All discussion below is archived from the Wikispaces export in its original unaltered form.'''
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| <span style="color:#800000">'''PLEASE MAKE ANY NEW COMMENTS <u>ABOVE</u> THIS SECTION.'''</span> Anything below here is for archival purposes only.
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| == **to have** v.s **to be** a constant structure ==
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| the introduction uses <em>to have</em> which I find better to understand, should we decide for a more consistent terminology for the verb?
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| - '''xenwolf''' September 04, 2017, 12:15:04 AM UTC-0700
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| == Construction of Constant Structures ==
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| Could some material or resources on -how- to construct these scales be added? It seems to get exponentially harder the more notes you want and the brute force approach isn't getting me anywhere.
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| I'm particularly interested in CS Scales because they seem to be the best option for bringing Just Intonation to isomorphic keyboards.
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| - '''kai.lugheidh''' March 21, 2017, 07:33:10 PM UTC-0700
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| I've noticed that when constructing regular scales for certain limits in a way that extends the concept of well-formedness – that is, having no more different scale steps than generating primes, and always breaking up any extraneous scale steps in the same way – Scala always reports them as being constant structures. Could I be on to something here?
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| - '''kai.lugheidh''' June 01, 2017, 08:15:01 PM UTC-0700
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| == Density of CS Scales in EDO's ==
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| What is the definition of density?
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| - '''xenwolf''' June 12, 2015, 01:21:15 AM UTC-0700
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| I guess I was thinking of something akin to this definition, but for scales instead of numbers:
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| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_density
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| Basically, it is a way to ask the question of "how many CS scales are there compared to non-CS scales?"
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| - '''Sarzadoce''' June 12, 2015, 09:01:02 PM UTC-0700
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