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The '''sharpness''' of an [[EDO]] is the number of steps it maps the apotome ([[2187/2048]]) to; in other words, it is the difference between seven of its best approximation of [[3/2]] and four octaves.
The '''sharpness''' of an [[EDO|edo]] is the number of steps to which it maps the chromatic semitone aka 3-limit augmented unison aka apotome ([[2187/2048]]). In other words, it is the difference between seven of its best approximation of [[3/2]] and four octaves.


For example, [[12edo]] maps the apotome to one step; it has a sharpness of 1. We could say it is a sharp-1 EDO. On the other hand, [[17edo]] maps the apotome to two steps, so it is a sharp-2 EDO.
For example, [[12edo]] maps the apotome to one step; it has a sharpness of 1, thus it is a sharp-1 edo. On the other hand, [[17edo]] maps the apotome to two steps, so it is a sharp-2 edo.


Some EDOs, such as [[16edo]], have fifths flat enough that the apotome is mapped to a negative number of steps. Since 16edo has the apotome mapped to −1 step, it is a flat-1 EDO.
Some edo, such as [[16edo]], have fifths flat enough that the apotome is mapped to a negative number of steps. Since 16edo maps the apotome to −1 step, it is a flat-1 edo. 11edo is a flat-2 edo.


A sharp-0 EDO is also known as a "perfect EDO".
A sharp-0 edo (7, 14, 21, etc.) is also known as a "perfect edo".


The sharpness of an EDO has implications for the heptatonic fifth-generated notation of that EDO. For example, all sharp-1 EDOs (5, 12, 19, 26...) can be notated conventionally with just 7 letters and #/b. Another example: the half-sharp and half-flat accidentals are applicable to an EDO only if its sharpness is an even number.
The sharpness of an edo has implications for the heptatonic fifth-generated notation of that edo. For example, all sharp-1 edos (5, 12, 19, 26...) can be notated conventionally with just 7 letters and #/b. Another example: the half-sharp and half-flat accidentals are applicable to an edo only if its sharpness is an even number.


== Table ==
The '''penta-sharpness''' of an edo is the number of steps to which it maps the diatonic semitone aka 3-limit minor 2nd aka limma ([[256/243]]). In other words, it's three octaves minus five of its best approximation of [[3/2]]. If one's notation were pentatonic instead of heptatonic, the concept of sharpness would be applied to the limma not the apotome, hence the name.
Below is a table showing the characteristics of each EDO up to 72 in the context of traditional fifth-generator heptatonic ups and downs notation. Each row represents the steps of a chromatic semitone. Each column represents the steps of a diatonic semitone (limma, [[256/243]]), located between E–F and B–C. If one's notation were pentatonic instead of heptatonic, the concept of sharpness would be applied to the limma not the apotome to get '''penta-sharpness'''. In the table below, the sharp-0 EDOs and the pentasharp-0 EDOs are bolded.
 
For example, 12, 17 and 22 are all pentasharp-1 edos, and 19 and 24 are both pentasharp-2 edos. A pentasharp-0 edo (5, 10, 15, etc.) is also known as a "pentatonic edo".
 
Using heptatonic fifth-generated notation with a penta-flat edo (e.g. 8, 13 or 18) has counter-intuitive results. The minor 2nd is descending, the major 2nd is wider than the minor 3rd, the 4th is narrower than the major 3rd, etc. One solution is to use the second best 5th, e.g. 13b or 18b.
 
Below is a table showing each edo up to 72, with sharpness increasing top to bottom and penta-sharpness increasing left to right. The sharp-0 edos and the pentasharp-0 edos are '''bolded'''.


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Revision as of 04:16, 5 October 2022

The sharpness of an edo is the number of steps to which it maps the chromatic semitone aka 3-limit augmented unison aka apotome (2187/2048). In other words, it is the difference between seven of its best approximation of 3/2 and four octaves.

For example, 12edo maps the apotome to one step; it has a sharpness of 1, thus it is a sharp-1 edo. On the other hand, 17edo maps the apotome to two steps, so it is a sharp-2 edo.

Some edo, such as 16edo, have fifths flat enough that the apotome is mapped to a negative number of steps. Since 16edo maps the apotome to −1 step, it is a flat-1 edo. 11edo is a flat-2 edo.

A sharp-0 edo (7, 14, 21, etc.) is also known as a "perfect edo".

The sharpness of an edo has implications for the heptatonic fifth-generated notation of that edo. For example, all sharp-1 edos (5, 12, 19, 26...) can be notated conventionally with just 7 letters and #/b. Another example: the half-sharp and half-flat accidentals are applicable to an edo only if its sharpness is an even number.

The penta-sharpness of an edo is the number of steps to which it maps the diatonic semitone aka 3-limit minor 2nd aka limma (256/243). In other words, it's three octaves minus five of its best approximation of 3/2. If one's notation were pentatonic instead of heptatonic, the concept of sharpness would be applied to the limma not the apotome, hence the name.

For example, 12, 17 and 22 are all pentasharp-1 edos, and 19 and 24 are both pentasharp-2 edos. A pentasharp-0 edo (5, 10, 15, etc.) is also known as a "pentatonic edo".

Using heptatonic fifth-generated notation with a penta-flat edo (e.g. 8, 13 or 18) has counter-intuitive results. The minor 2nd is descending, the major 2nd is wider than the minor 3rd, the 4th is narrower than the major 3rd, etc. One solution is to use the second best 5th, e.g. 13b or 18b.

Below is a table showing each edo up to 72, with sharpness increasing top to bottom and penta-sharpness increasing left to right. The sharp-0 edos and the pentasharp-0 edos are bolded.

Sharpness value \ penta-sharpness value
-2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
-3 6b 13b
-2 4 11 18b
-1 2 9 16 23 30b
0 7 14 21 28 35 42b
1 5 12 19 26 33 40 47 54b
2 3 10 17 24 31 38 45 52 59b
3 1 8 15 22 29 36 43 50 57 64 71b
4 6 13 20 27 34 41 48 55 62 69
5 11b 18 25 32 39 46 53 60 67
6 23b 30 37 44 51 58 65 72
7 35b 42 49 56 63 70
8 47b 54 61 68
9 52b 59 66
10 64b 71

See also

External links