Xenwolf (talk | contribs)
Arseniiv (talk | contribs)
m just to appreciate
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::::: Oh, and as for your question as to whether this chain of primes is JI primes or each respective EDO's patent val primes, given that we're working with EDOs, it follows that the 2-prime is just, though for everything else... well... let's say [[49/32]] is "r", since this interval is made by stacking two instance of [[7/4]] then octave-reducing.  There's a difference between say, the direct mapping of your example interval (represented by the right side of the equation), which is the step of the EDO that most closely approximates the just interval in question, and the patent-val-based traditional mapping of that same interval (represented by the left side of the equation), which depends on the mapping generated by stacking multiple instances of the EDO's best approximation of the patent prime interval and octave reducing.  The equation tests to see if the results of both of these mappings are identical (indicated by the equation being "true") or not.  From there, the only way I can think of to answer that is to say that you need to study the definition of "telicity" itself.  Does this make sense? --[[User:Aura|Aura]] ([[User talk:Aura|talk]]) 14:41, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
::::: Oh, and as for your question as to whether this chain of primes is JI primes or each respective EDO's patent val primes, given that we're working with EDOs, it follows that the 2-prime is just, though for everything else... well... let's say [[49/32]] is "r", since this interval is made by stacking two instance of [[7/4]] then octave-reducing.  There's a difference between say, the direct mapping of your example interval (represented by the right side of the equation), which is the step of the EDO that most closely approximates the just interval in question, and the patent-val-based traditional mapping of that same interval (represented by the left side of the equation), which depends on the mapping generated by stacking multiple instances of the EDO's best approximation of the patent prime interval and octave reducing.  The equation tests to see if the results of both of these mappings are identical (indicated by the equation being "true") or not.  From there, the only way I can think of to answer that is to say that you need to study the definition of "telicity" itself.  Does this make sense? --[[User:Aura|Aura]] ([[User talk:Aura|talk]]) 14:41, 25 January 2021 (UTC)
Hi! You have some neat things here, wow! --[[User:Arseniiv|Arseniiv]] ([[User talk:Arseniiv|talk]]) 17:21, 11 October 2021 (UTC)


== Table usability ==
== Table usability ==