Ploidacot: Difference between revisions

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== Properties ==
== Properties ==
 
* For ''n''-cot systems there are exactly ''n'' settings of shear, or number of ploids to add to the step that represents the interval class of 3. These are 0-, 1-, 2-, …, {{nowrap|(''n'' - 1)}}-sheared ''n''-cot. For example, the tricot systems are tricot (0-sheared), alpha-tricot (1-sheared), and beta-tricot (2-sheared). There is not a *gamma-tricot since that would be equivalent to tricot.


== Examples ==
== Examples ==

Revision as of 11:55, 14 January 2025

The ploidacot system is a classification of rank-2 temperaments based on how a temperament can be thought of as a union of copies of Pythagorean tuning. It is similar to the pergen, and is a canonical naming scheme for pergens of rank-2 temperaments of the 2.3.… subgroup in that every such pergen corresponds to a unique name in the ploidacot system.

The ploidacot system was developed by Praveen Venkataramana.

Specification

Ploids

Any rank-2 temperament of the 2.3.… subgroup has an octave, and it must split the octave into a number of parts, or periods, called ploids. The temperament's number of ploids per octave is specified by a Greek numeral prefix (di-, tri-, etc.) and -ploid. For instance, pajara divides the octave into two, so it is diploid. Temperaments that do not divide the octave are called haploid (not *monoploid), which can be omitted.

Cots

If 3/2 is represented by a linearly independent element to the ploid, there is a number of ploids which when added to 3/2 gives the interval which is split into the largest number of parts, namely generators, by the temperament. Each of these parts is called a cot or cotyledon. The ploidacot system uses Greek letters (alpha-, beta-, etc.) to describe the smallest nonnegative number of ploids that should be added to 3/2 to form a whole number of cots. If the number is zero, it is left empty. The number of cots is then indicated by a Greek numeral prefix. Temperaments that do not divide the fifth are called monocot (not *haplocot). The full specification of cots is thus a (possibly empty) Greek letter prefix, followed by a Greek numeral prefix, and -cot.

Temperaments where the image of 3/2 is a whole number of ploids are called acot.

Greek letter prefixes

The Greek letter prefixes follow the ancient gematria/isopsephic system, detailed below:

Greek letter prefixes in ploidacot
Number n 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Prefix n alpha beta gamma delta epsilon digamma zeta eta theta
10n iota kappa lambda mu nu xi omicron pi qoppa
n + 10 iota-alpha iota-beta iota-gamma iota-delta iota-epsilon iota-digamma iota-zeta iota-eta iota-theta

Prefixes for numbers between 21 and 99 are constructed the same way as number words in English, for instance 21 is kappa-alpha and 99 is qoppa-theta.

Alternatively, Arabic numerals may be used in place of the Greek alphabetical and numeric prefixes, with the word "sheared" or its equivalent in other languages used in place of the alphabetic prefixes, so a diploid epsilon-heptacot system may be referred to as a 2-ploid 5-sheared 7-cot system.

Properties

  • For n-cot systems there are exactly n settings of shear, or number of ploids to add to the step that represents the interval class of 3. These are 0-, 1-, 2-, …, (n - 1)-sheared n-cot. For example, the tricot systems are tricot (0-sheared), alpha-tricot (1-sheared), and beta-tricot (2-sheared). There is not a *gamma-tricot since that would be equivalent to tricot.

Examples

Notation

TODO: Come up with canonical ups and downs notation systems for pergen squares