Kite's thoughts on pergens: Difference between revisions
Move the basic info here from the FAQ of regular temperaments. Also promote the first paragraph of definition to complete the intro |
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A '''pergen''' (pronounced "peer-gen") is a way of classifying a [[regular temperament]] solely by its [[periods and generators|period and generator(s)]]. For any temperament, there are many possible periods and generators. For the pergen, they are chosen to use the fewest, and smallest, prime factors possible. Fractions are allowed, e.g. half-octave, but avoided if possible. Every rank-2, rank-3, rank-4, etc. temperament has a pergen. Assuming the prime [[subgroup]] includes both 2 and 3, a rank-2 temperament's period is either an octave or some fraction of it, and its generator is either a fifth or some fraction of some 3-limit interval. Since both period and generator are conventional musical intervals or some fractions of them, the pergen gives great insight into notating a temperament. Several temperaments may share the same pergen, in fact, every [[strong extension]] of a temperament has the same pergen as the original temperament. Thus pergens classify temperaments but do not uniquely identify them. "c" in a pergen means compound (widened by one octave), e.g. ccP5 is a 5th plus two 8ves, or 6/1. | A '''pergen''' (pronounced "peer-gen") is a way of classifying a [[regular temperament]] solely by its [[periods and generators|period and generator(s)]]. For any temperament, there are many possible periods and generators. For the pergen, they are chosen to use the fewest, and smallest, prime factors possible. Fractions are allowed, e.g. half-octave, but avoided if possible. Every rank-2, rank-3, rank-4, etc. temperament has a pergen. Assuming the prime [[subgroup]] includes both 2 and 3, a rank-2 temperament's period is either an octave or some fraction of it, and its generator is either a fifth or some fraction of some 3-limit interval. Since both period and generator are conventional musical intervals or some fractions of them, the pergen gives great insight into notating a temperament. Several temperaments may share the same pergen, in fact, every [[strong extension]] of a temperament has the same pergen as the original temperament. Thus pergens classify temperaments but do not uniquely identify them. "c" in a pergen means compound (widened by one octave), e.g. ccP5 is a 5th plus two 8ves, or 6/1. | ||
Pergens also provide a way to name precise tunings of any rank-2 temperament. Meantone tunings are named third-comma, quarter-comma, two-fifths-comma, etc. for the fraction of an 81/80 comma that the 5th is flattened by. (The octave is assumed to be just.) This can be generalized to all temperaments. For example, fifth-comma [[Porcupine|Porcupine aka Triyo]] has the 5th sharpened by one-fifth of [[250/243]] ({{monzo| 1 -5 3 }}). Sharpened not flattened because the comma is fourthwards not fifthwards, i.e. it has prime 3 in the denominator not the numerator. Given the comma fraction, the generator's exact size can be deduced from the pergen. Here the pergen is (P8, P4/3). Because the 5th is sharpened, the 4th is flattened. Because the generator is 1/3 of a 4th, the generator is flattened by 1/3 of 1/5 of a comma, or 1/15 comma. If the temperament's comma doesn't contain prime 3, the next larger prime is used. For example, Augmented aka Trigu tempers out 128/125. The third-comma tuning sharpens 5/4 by just enough to equate it to a third of an 8ve. If a temperament has multiple commas, the comma fraction refers to the first comma in the color name. | Pergens also provide a way to name precise tunings of any rank-2 temperament. Meantone tunings are named third-comma, quarter-comma, two-fifths-comma, etc. for the fraction of an 81/80 comma that the 5th is flattened by. (The octave is assumed to be just.) This can be generalized to all temperaments. For example, fifth-comma [[Porcupine|Porcupine aka Triyo]] has the 5th sharpened by one-fifth of [[250/243]] ({{monzo| 1 -5 3 }}). Sharpened not flattened because the comma is fourthwards not fifthwards, i.e. it has prime 3 in the denominator not the numerator. Given the comma fraction, the generator's exact size can be deduced from the pergen. Here the pergen is (P8, P4/3). Because the 5th is sharpened, the 4th is flattened. Because the generator is 1/3 of a 4th, the generator is flattened by 1/3 of 1/5 of a comma, or 1/15 comma. If the temperament's comma doesn't contain prime 3, the next larger prime is used. For example, Augmented aka Trigu tempers out 128/125. The third-comma tuning sharpens 5/4 by just enough to equate it to a third of an 8ve. If a temperament has multiple commas, the comma fraction refers to the first comma in the color name. (Note these uses of comma fractions are not convention universally; temperament pages tend to use comma fractions to imply inflections of the generator rather than the fifth.) | ||
Overwhelmed? See [http://tallkite.com/misc_files/notation%20guide%20for%20rank-2%20pergens.pdf ''Notation guide for rank-2 pergens''] for practical notation examples. | Overwhelmed? See [http://tallkite.com/misc_files/notation%20guide%20for%20rank-2%20pergens.pdf ''Notation guide for rank-2 pergens''] for practical notation examples. |